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Lula da Silva wants Obama to become “partner” of Latinamerica

Saturday, March 7th 2009 - 09:58 UTC
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Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia and energy in the Lula da Silva agenda Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia and energy in the Lula da Silva agenda

Brazilian president Lula da Silva said Friday that during his coming meeting with his US counterpart on Saturday March 14 he would ask President Obama to adopt a more “development minded” attitude towards Latinamerica.

“We are a democratic and pacific continent and the US should look at us with a more development minded attitude and not only think about drug trafficking and organized crime”, said Lula da Silva who will be the first Latinamerican leader to meet President Obama at the White House.

Lula da Silva said the main purpose of his trip to Washington, invited by President Obama, is to convince the new US leader to become a “partner” of Latinamerica and help strengthen the continent.

The meeting was originally scheduled for March 17th but was advanced because of St. Patrick’s Day.

A long agenda awaits the two presidents beginning with the world slowdown and the coming G-20 summit in London where both leaders will again meet. Brazil has emerged as a strong supporter of free trade and has urged a quick approval of the WTO Doha round to help abort the growing global protectionist tendencies.

On the more political side, Lula da Silva will want to talk about Venezuela, Cuba, Bolivia and overall relations with Latinamerica.

Earlier this week, President Hugo Chavez gave the green light for Lula da Silva to talk with Obama about Venezuela and the diplomatic rift with the US, inherited from the previous George W. Bush administration.

On Cuba Lula da Silva is expected to insist with the Latinamerican consensus that it’s time to end the US embargo on the Castro regime. Brazil has pointed out that the (new) US position towards Cuba will have a significant effect on relations of the continent with Washington.

The Brazilian president is also expected to defend Bolivia which has had a troublesome relation, full of retaliations with the former Bush administration. Bolivia has seen its textiles exports to the US suspended following the expulsion of the US ambassador in La Paz and the DEA officers, whose office was closed down.

Bio-fuels of which the US and Brazil are leading global producers (from corn and sugar cane respectively) is another chapter of the agenda particularly since the Obama stimulus plan contemplates 15 billion US dollars for the development of new clean energies, cut US overseas dependency on imported oil and reduce emissions which stimulate climate change.

Following the meeting Lula da Silva will travel to New York for a conference to US businesses about investment opportunities in Brazil.

In a brief release on the coming visit the White House said “Brazil is a close friend and partner of the United States” and President Obama “looks forward to discussing ways in which the two countries can strengthen cooperation on global and hemispheric challenges”.

President Obama is also looking forward “to consulting with President Lula on effective measures to respond to the global financial crisis during the upcoming G-20 meeting, ensuring a productive agenda for the Summit of the Americas in April and on ways to deepen cooperation on other wide-ranging issues in the bilateral relationship”.

Categories: Politics, Brazil, United States.

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