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EU-Latin
America summit in Vienna
By
Jean-Michel Stoullig
AFP
VIENNA
Petroleumworld.com
05 11 06
The European Union opens a three-day summit in Vienna Thursday with
the world's oil crisis set to top the agenda.
The summit will focus on trade relations but is not expected to produce
any major agreements.
It is the fourth such meeting, with the last EU-Latin America-Caribbean
summit coming two years ago in Guadalajara, Mexico. Some 60 heads of
state and government, as well as UN Secretary General Koffi Annan, are
expected to attend.
Latin America's superstar Cuban leader Fidel Castro is not coming but
presidents Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil, Argentina's Nestor Kirchner,
Mexico's Vicente Fox, and Chilean Michelle Bachelet will be there as
well as leftist national leaders Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Evo Morales
of Boliva.
Morales has made headlines by nationalizing the oil industry in his
country and Chavez probes a strongly anti-American, anti-imperialist
line, despite his country being one of the United States' major oil
suppliers.
There may be more sympathy in Europe than in Washington for the populist
aspirations of such Latin American leaders.
European Commissioner for Foreign Affairs Benita Ferrero-Waldner said
in March that "inequalities clear the way for populists to present
themselves as leaders at certain times."
"People want equality, want to do away with poverty," she
said.
Human rights will be a key theme during the summit. Austrian Foreign
Minister Ursula Plassnik, speaking for Austria as current EU president
and host of the gathering, has said that social cohesion and the fight
against poverty must be encouraged.
On Thursday, foreign ministers will debate "Strengthening the bi-regional
strategic association," Plassnik said in a statement on the Austrian
presidency's web site for the summit.
She said Europe and Latin America are "partners" and have
the same values.
The two regions each have about half a billion inhabitants and have
evolved towards democracy.
The EU is overall the largest investor in Latin America, the major aid
donor and the region's second-largest trading partner, after the United
States.
Bilateral trade increased 13 percent in 2005 to reach 118 billion euros
(147 billion dollars), according to EU statistics.
There will be a "business forum," attended by over 200 entrepreneurs,
bankers and politicians, during the summit.
But political analyst Ramon Torrent said at a recent seminar in Vienna
that the summit would focus on "political declarations rather than
practical results."
Eneko Landabaru, chief of external affairs at the European Commission
wants to get talks started on a free-trade agreement for the EU with
central America, even if no customs agreements have been agreed after
seven years of talks with the South American Mercosur common market
of Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay.
Local interests in the Caribbean as well as the threat of a break-up
of the Andean community of nations, from which Venezuela has pulled
out, are obtacles to regional integration in Latin America.
More widespread trade agreements with the EU depend on such integration.
On the other hands, say analysts, political problems in the EU keep
the Union from reaching out more to Latin America, which remains a key
sphere of influence of the United States.
After rejecting a European constitution, "the European Union has
neither the political leadership nor the decision-making ability to
make Latin America a key part of its overall world strategy," said
Argentinian political analyst Raul Bernal-Meza.
AFP 10 1943 GMT 05 06
Copyright © 1994-2006 Agence France-Presse. All Rights Reserved.
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