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Brazil's Position Prevents Consensus on Summit of the Americas PDF Print E-mail
Written by A.M.   
Saturday, 05 November 2005

Negotiations on whether to revitalize talks on a hemispheric free trade zone dragged on for hours past a deadline Saturday, and a top negotiator said the 34 nations participating in the Americas Summit were still deeply divided over the issue.

U.S. President George W. Bush and U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice left Argentina on Air Force One as the negotiations that were scheduled to end before lunch went into the late afternoon.

American Thomas Shannon, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, was left in charge of negotiations for the United States. Negotiators canceled lunch and delayed a summit closing ceremony, as well as a press conference to announce the summit's final declaration.

The top negotiator said countries would be allowed to opt out of a controversial clause on whether to schedule talks next year on creating a Free Trade Area of the Americas.

The official declined to give his name because the declaration had not yet been finalized. Mexico, the United States and 27 other nations wanted to set an April deadline for talks, but that was opposed by Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay and Venezuela.

The United States says the trade zone would open up new markets for Americans while bringing wealth and jobs to Latin America, but Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez came to the summit in this seaside resort vowing to "bury FTAA."

The last minute haggling at the summit of 34 Latin American and Caribbean nations came after Brazil - a key regional player with Latin America's largest economy - hedged at setting a firm date because it wants to focus for now on ongoing World Trade Organization talks aimed at cutting tariffs around the world and boosting the planet's economy.

Calm After Storm

Mar del Plata was calm Saturday after protesters opposed to the presence of U.S. President George W. Bush and the FTAA clashed in street battles with riot police, burning and ransacking businesses just 10 blocks from the theater where the leaders opened the summit.

Protests have become commonplace at summits, especially those dealing with free trade and U.S. policies. But Friday's violence was on a much smaller scale than massive clashes in 2001 during the Americas Summit in Canada, when police detained 400 people and scores were injured.

Chavez is easily the most vocal critic of the FTAA, declaring the deal dead at a peaceful rally Friday for more than 20,000 protesters.

On Saturday, November 5, Mexican President Vicente Fox expressed irritation with his Venezuelan counterpart, saying: "This is a personal position of the Venezuelan President." The Mexican President also denied allegations by Chavez that Washington is trying to strong-arm the region into a free trade agreement.

The summit declaration was also expected to address key issues for Latin America - including job creation, immigration and disaster relief for an area that is often devastated by hurricanes and earthquakes.

But the battle over the future of the FTAA dominated the summit, with Chavez saying an anti-FTAA should be formed just for Latin America and the Caribbean based on socialist ideals. Fox argued that the 29 countries that want to forge ahead should form the trade zone on their own - even though that would leave out Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and Venezuela and dash hopes of creating a bloc that would eclipse the European Union.

Though there were no immediate signs that protests would re-ignite on Saturday, security remained tight at the summit site, where a huge downtown section of Mar del Plata remained closed by metal barriers and police and soldiers toting semiautomatic weapons. Leftist activists also protested Friday in Uruguay, Venezuela and Brazil - where Bush heads for a much-anticipated visit with Lula after the summit ends.

The violence was front-page news Saturday across Latin America, with dramatic photos of young masked rioters smashing the glass storefronts of at least 30 businesses in Mar del Plata, setting a bank ablaze and battling riot police with slingshots and sharpened sticks.

Sixty four people were arrested, but police reported no deaths or major injuries. Bush left Argentina late Saturday and flied to Brasília to stay the night and be Lula's guest at a barbecue Sunday, before heading to Panama.

The American President's visit is aimed at strengthening relations with Lula, who was distrusted by Washington after becoming the first elected leftist leader of Latin America's largest country in 2003. But Silva - a former shoeshine boy, grade-school dropout, lathe operator and radical union leader - abandoned his leftist rhetoric and has stabilized Brazil's economy.

Protesters who participated all week in a peaceful "People's Summit" demonstration in a sports complex a mile from the oceanfront hotel where the leaders stayed were gone Saturday, after leaving Mar del Plata in caravans of buses and minivans.

As children skateboarded in a shady park, workers dismantled a tent that hosted a delegation from Cuba, whose communist regime was not allowed to participate in the Americas Summit.

Argentine security guard Sebastian Lopez, 30, hoped the leaders would denounce the violent protests because they unfairly overshadowed both events.

This article appeared originally in Pravda – www.pravda.ru.

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Comments (1)Add Comment
no free trade
written by Guest, November 06, 2005
has there ever been free trade? hate to be negative but there seems to always be some winner and loser (perhaps not always). free trade works, in my humble opinion, when economies complement on another. for example, if "country A" exports raw materials and food while "country B" lacks similar resources. thus, "country B" trades with "country A" for those resoures with products that it makes, for example say electronics. where things breakdown is when the two countries don't need on anothers exports or there's a third party (or more) involved to complicate the availability of options.
now, regarding the U.S.A. and this summit, this country's leadership has created the unilaterial (go it alone) attitude denounced by many plain citizens around the world. though, being solo with one's decisions can be ok, as a country you just have to be ready to deal with the consequences. perfect example, is the rejection by many citizens @ this free trade initiative.
personally, i'm saddened by this articles revelation that the U.S.A. lack of trust of Silva Lula (Brazil's honestly elected president). it isn't the U.S.A., or any other countries, business to tell other countries who or how to elect someone. It makes me recall Lumumda (Congo 60's) and Allende (Chile 70's). U.S.A. should work on building partnerships to influence and building a world Team effort toward peace.
acommon(traveler)
rob j>
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