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Cuba,
Venezuela, Bolivia seal anti-US trade deal
By
Isabel Sanchez
AFP
HAVANA
Petroleumworld.com
04 30 06
The leftist leaders of Cuba, Venezuela and Bolivia signed a trade agreement
Saturday to counter a US-led drive to forge a Pan-American free trade
area.
Cuban leader Fidel Castro hosted Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and
Bolivian President Evo Morales in a show of unity for the strongest
critics of the United States in Latin America.
Castro, who leads the Americas' only one-party communist state, hailed
his two allies, who call him "big brother."
"These new leaders have emerged and they make me the happiest man
in the world," the 79-year-old leader said.
"Now, for the first time, there are three of us," he said.
Bolivia joined Cuba and Venezuela in the Bolivarian Alternative for
the Americas (ALBA), an initiative promoted by Castro and Chavez in
an attempt to thwart US plans for the Free Trade Area of the Americas
(FTAA).
"ALBA is moving forward, and facing the aggression of the imperial
projects of the free trade agreement, all we can do is attack,"
Chavez said. Castro added: "The best defense is to counter-attack
and this is what we have done."
The trio also signed a "People's Trade Treaty" in which oil-rich
Venezuela will boost crude and gas exports to Bolivia.
Morales said the treaty will help Bolivia emerge from an economic crisis.
"Only in Cuba and Venezuela can we get unconditional support,"
he said.
Chavez, who has become a thorn in Washington's side since his 1998 election,
praised what he described as Cuba's economic achievements under the
leadership of Castro, his key regional ally.
"I have been visiting this country for 12 years," he said,
"and in all those years, I have seen nothing but progress, growth
and victories."
Venezuela now props up Cuba's fragile centrally planned economy with
its oil supplies. Cuba suffered an economic collapse after the demise
of the Eastern Bloc that used to subsidize it, and it is still in dire
economic straits. Cuban workers earn the equivalent of about 22 dollars
a month.
The mini-summit of leftist leaders has been eyed with some concern in
the region, as members of the Andean Community that includes Bolivia,
Colombia, Ecuador and Peru fear their grouping could be dealt another
blow if Bolivia decides to follow Venezuela's lead and pull out.
Venezuela officially pulled out of the Andean Community this past week
in protest over its members signing bilateral free trade agreements
with the United States that Caracas insists threaten the commercial
interests of Latin American countries.
Bolivian Finance Minister Luis Arce has already warned that Bolivia
will follow Venezuela's lead if Ecuador, Colombia and Peru continue
to develop their free trade ties with the United States.
However, plans to pull out from the Andean Community worry Bolivian
farmers, who fear the move could negatively affect vital soybean exports.
But Morales sought to assuage their concerns by saying he had received
assurances that Cuba and Venezuela will buy all of Bolivia's soybean
crop.
Talks about forming the FTAA began at a Pan-American summit in Miami
in December 1994, with the parties committing themselves to wrap up
their work by 2005.
But Chavez managed to rally opposition to the accord at the last summit
on the issue, held in Mar del Plata, Argentina, in January of last year.
The summit, attended by US President George W. Bush, ended in a fiasco
for the US leader: No agreement on the FTAA was reached, although the
parties pledged to meet again this year to resume lagging negotiations.
AFP
30 04 06 0054 GMT
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© 1994-2006 Agence France-Presse. All Rights Reserved.
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