US under pressure to let Cuba attend summit

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CARTAGENA (Colombia): Leaders from across the Americas launched talks here yesterday on expanding trade as the United States came under strong pressure to let Cuba attend future summits.

 

 
Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, host of the Summit of the Americas,  said yesterday  it would be “unacceptable” to keep Cuba out of the next gathering.
 
“The isolation, the indifference has shown its ineffectiveness. In today’s  world, there is no justification for this anachronism,” he added.
   
Cuba has never taken part in a Summit of the Americas, a regular meeting  sponsored by the Organization of American States (OAS).
   
Washington argues that communist-ruled Cuba is ineligible to attend because  it lacks democratic credentials and does not “respect the human rights of the  Cuban people.”    Cuba was expelled from the OAS in 1962 at the height of the Cold War. The  expulsion was rescinded in 2009, but Cuba has refused to return to the US-based  organization.
 
Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa is boycotting the summit because of the  exclusion of Cuba, one of its allies and the Americas’ only one-party Communist  state.
 
Yesterday, an alliance of left-leaning Latin American countries known as  ALBA  announced here that its members would not take part in any future summits  of the Americas if Cuba was kept out.
   
“We express our decision not to take part in future Summits of the Americas  without the presence of Cuba,” ALBA, which groups Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia,  Nicaragua, Cuba, Antigua and Barbuda and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, said  in a statement.
 
It also demanded an immediate end to Washington’s 50-year-old “inhuman  economic, trade and financial embargo against Cuba” and urged regional  countries “to continue to maintain its united solidarity in favor of Cuba’s  admission to the summit”.    The two-day summit formally opened earlier Saturday under tight security in  this Colombian Caribbean resort city, attended by US President Barack Obama and  30 other democratically elected leaders of the Western Hemisphere.
 
“It is remarkable to see the changes that have been taking place in a  relatively short period of time in Latin, Central America and in the  Caribbean,” the US leader said at a business forum ahead of the summit. “We’ve  seen enormous progress.
 
But Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, speaking at the same forum, urged  Obama to treat Latin America as an equal.
 
“In Latin America, we have a huge space to make our relationship one of  partnership, but partnership between equals,” said Rousseff, whose country has  gained mounting international clout as the world’s sixth largest economy and  Latin America’s dominant power.
 
“This is a very relevant factor between the most developed country of the  region and Latin American countries,” she added, in veiled criticism of  Washington’s past dealings with an area it used to view as its own back yard.
 
Acknowledging the region’s growing assertiveness and independence, Obama  said in response: “I think often times in the press the focus is on  controversies. Sometime those controversies date back to before I was born ... 
to the 1950’s ... Yankees and the Cold War, and this and that.
 
“That is not the world in which we are living today,” the US leader said. 
 
"My hope is that we all recognize this enormous opportunity that we have.”    In addition to Cuba, many Latin American leaders sought to focus on the  pros and cons of drug legalization.
 
The devastating effects of illegal drug trafficking is of particular  concern to Central American leaders.
 
The US war on drugs has left 50,000 dead in five years in Mexico and 20,000  in Central America last year, in addition to tens of thousands of fatalities in  other countries of the region.
 
Several Central American leaders met here on the sidelines of the summit to  discuss Guatemala’s proposal to consider legalizing street drug consumption. 
But they failed to reach consensus.
 
Guatemalan President Otto Perez insisted that his idea remained very much  alive and voiced hope it would be taken up at a private meeting of hemispheric  leaders.
 
Speaking at the business forum, Obama meanwhile said he favored a debate on  the issue. On Friday, he said he opposed decriminalization or legalization of  drugs.
 
“I think it is a valuable agenda to have a conversation whether the laws in  place are laws that are doing more harm than good in certain places,” the US  leader said Saturday.
 
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who is suffering from cancer, did not  make the trip to Cartagena on the advice of his doctors. He was to travel to  Cuba for further radiation therapy to treat a recurrence of cancer, according  to his foreign minister Nicolas Maduro. -- AFP

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