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Venezuela rejects Colombia rebels refuge charge

Venezuela rejected accusations that it’s safeguarding leaders of Colombia’s biggest rebel group and will recall its ambassador to Bogota for consultations.

Venezuela would expel any members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia discovered in the country, the Foreign Ministry said today in an e-mailed statement. The charges are another of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe’s attempts to “destroy” relations between the countries, the statement said.

“Venezuela rejects this new attack by outgoing President Uribe in his desire to destroy relations, which he has attempted to do with a sick obsession,” the ministry said.

Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro said Venezuela will recall its ambassador from Colombia for consultations after Colombian Defense Minister Gabriel Silva provided reporters yesterday with what he said was photographic evidence that key leaders of the FARC, as the rebel group is known, are living freely in Venezuela. President Hugo Chavez has repeatedly sparred with Uribe over claims he provides assistance to the FARC, leading to a freeze in relations and a plunge in trade.

Among the rebel leaders living in Venezuela are those known by their aliases as Ivan Marquez, Rodrigo Granda, Timochenko, Grannobles and Pablito, Uribe’s office said in a statement yesterday. Several leaders from the smaller National Liberation Army are also in Venezuela, it said.

The peso fell 0.4 percent, its biggest drop in more than a week, to 1,877.85 per dollar at 3:30 p.m. in New York.

Satellite Images

Silva yesterday showed some members of the media satellite images of FARC camps, Caracol Radio said. Ivan Marquez, part of the FARC’s seven-man high command, appeared in a photograph beside two French poodles, Caracol said.

Bloomberg News wasn’t permitted access to the news conference.

Colombia may take its complaint about the guerrilla presence in Venezuela to “international bodies,” Uribe’s office said in a statement today.

“For six years the Colombian government held a patient dialogue with the Venezuelan government, and on various occasions gave information about the location of terrorists in that territory,” the statement said. “It was all unfruitful.”

Venezuela called Silva’s presentation yesterday a “pathetic media spectacle.”

New President

Chavez said today that the accusations are an attempt by Uribe’s government to strain ties before President-elect Juan Manuel Santos takes office Aug. 7. Venezuela will continue to work to improve relations with Santos as long as there is mutual respect, he said on state television.

“I know very well what has caused the desperation of Uribe -- he’s leaving,” Chavez said. “Hopefully the new president, despite his past, can honor his word.”

The accusations will likely escalate tensions and amount to a “poisoning of the well” after Santos had sent reconciliatory signs to Chavez by inviting him to his inauguration next month, Adam Isacson, senior associate at the Washington Office on Latin America, said in a phone interview.

Rebel Ties

Concern about the extent of the rebels’ involvement with Chavez, a self-described revolutionary socialist long suspected by Colombia of supporting the FARC, was heightened after March 2008 when Colombia launched an air-raid into Ecuador, killing the group’s second in command, Raul Reyes.

Colombia’s military, led by Santos at that time, found a computer that it said contained correspondence between the guerrillas and Chavez’s government.

Chavez ordered troops to Venezuela’s border with Colombia in response to the attack on his ally, Ecuador. He then cut trade ties after Uribe agreed last year to expand U.S. access to seven military bases. Chavez has denied aiding the rebels.

Exports to Venezuela plunged 69 percent in May compared with the same period a year ago. Before relations soured, Venezuela was Colombia’s biggest export market after the U.S.

The FARC, which is classified as a terrorist organization by the U.S. and the European Union, was founded in 1964 as a rural, peasant, Marxist insurgency.

The group, which a decade ago numbered about 18,000, has been whittled down to half that since 2002, when Uribe ordered an offensive on the rebels.

The FARC traffics in cocaine for the bulk of its revenue, according to the U.S., which has sent Colombia $7 billion in the past 10 years for its anti-insurgency campaign. More than 80 percent of the cocaine sold in the U.S. comes from Colombia.

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Haitian senators have taken a key first step toward replacing the prime minister they ousted a week ago.
Obama pick for Brazil embassy held up
Senator George Le Mieux of Florida is using Senate rules to block a vote on President Obama´s nominee for ambassador to Brazil, U.S. Senate Republican and Democratic aides said.
Honduras split grows
MEXICO CITY — The collapse of an agreement that only a week ago was celebrated in Honduras as bringing the end to a four-month political standoff has only intensified the divisions that have long characterized the crisis
Chilean President rides high as term ends
At first, breaking the gender barrier in South America did not go smoothly for Michelle Bachelet.
Chevron case in Ecuador undermined
HOUSTON — An American whose secret recordings have placed him at the center of a $27 billion lawsuit against Chevron in Ecuador is a convicted drug trafficker, records show, throwing another complication into a case already tainted by accusations of bribery and espionage.
US, Colombia sign military accord
U.S. and Colombian officials signed a pact for U.S. military access to Colombian bases that has been vociferously denounced by Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez and other leftist Latin American presidents as a regional threat negotiated in secret.
Honduras deal restores ousted President
MEXICO CITY — A lingering political crisis in Honduras seemed to be nearing an end after the de facto government agreed to a deal that would allow Manuel Zelaya, the deposed president, to return to office.
Ex-guerrilla ahead in Uruguay vote
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay — A Socialist former guerrilla fighter known for speaking his mind emerged the clear winner of the election for president of Uruguay but did not muster enough votes to avoid a November runoff, in what analysts said was a referendum on the current leftist government.
Honduras talks broken off
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras -- Negotiators trying to resolve the Honduran political crisis said that talks have broken off, the third such announcement in the past week.
Uruguay’s Mujica has 45.5% support
Oct. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Former Uruguayan guerilla José Mujica leads opposition candidate and ex-President Luis Alberto Lacalle ahead of the country’s Oct. 25 presidential elections, according to a poll by Montevideo-based Equipos Mori.
Top Colombian judges threatened
Supreme Court justices face death threats as they investigate dozens of legislators’ links to paramilitary groups.
Chavez's popularity down
CARACAS, Venezuela -- Hugo Chavez's support has declined in the polls as many Venezuelans say they are fed up with 27 percent inflation, a stagnant economy, faulty public services - and a government they see as incapable of doing much about it.
Violence in Rio rattles Brazil
RIO DE JANEIRO — Just over two weeks ago, this striking city landed the 2016 Olympic games, the first ever in South America, setting off a sweaty, impromptu beach party that lasted most of the weekend. President Lula da Silva of Brazil sobbed with happiness. Rio’s residents glowed with pride.
Zelaya's 'Resistance' losing steam, vote near
Supporters of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya say the waning attention to their rallies underscores a new urgency for their mission.
Brazil vows to fight gangs
SAO PAULO -- Brazil's president promised to battle drug traffickers who launched a weekend of bloody chaos that killed 21 people in Rio de Janeiro just two weeks after the city won the 2016 Olympic games.
Investigators fearful in Mexican drug war
CIUDAD JUÁREZ, Mexico — The hit men moved in on their target, shot him dead and then disappeared in a matter of seconds. It would have been a perfect case for José Ibarra Limón, one of this violent border city’s most dogged crime investigators — had he not been the victim.
Malnutrition in drought-stricken Guatemala
Relief workers fear that the rainy season in Guatemala hasn't done enough to stem a drought that's exacerbating malnutrition.
Contradictory accounts on Honduras deal
There were reports of a deal on Wednesday, followed by reports of no deal. By the end of the day, the Honduras political standoff was mired in the same confusion that has characterized it from the start.
Argentine Senate approves media law
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -- Argentina's Senate overwhelmingly approved a law that will transform the nation's media landscape , and President Cristina Fernandez quickly signed it into law.
Fidel Castro: Obama Nobel positive
Count Fidel Castro among those in favor of the Norwegian Nobel Committee's controversial choice of U.S. President Barack Obama for the Nobel Peace prize.
Cuba pins hopes on farms for profit
Program Part of 'New Socialist Model'
CEIBA DEL AGUA, Cuba -- Faced with the smothering inefficiencies of a state-run economy and unable to feed his people without massive imports of food, Cuban leader Raúl Castro has put his faith in compatriots like Esther Fuentes and his little farm out in the sticks.
Ecuador pollution case grows
QUITO, Ecuador — The multibillion-dollar legal case between Amazon peasants and Chevron over oil pollution in Ecuador´s rain forest keeps unfolding more like a mystery thriller than a battle of briefs.
Ecuador considering end to Indian protest
QUITO, Ecuador -- Ecuador says it will consider changes to draft mining and water laws that provoked a clash with Indians last week that claimed a protester's life.
Uruguay former guerilla frontrunner poses no risk
Uruguay’s Economy Minister Alvaro García said a former guerilla who is the frontrunner to win presidential elections this month would maintain the current economic policy, clearing the way for the country to regain an investment-grade rating on its debt.
Honduras standoff melting away
TEGUCIGALPA-- Two rival factions fighting for control of Honduras have begun talking days before a meeting that many hope will end a political crisis sparked by Central America's first coup in more than a decade.
Rio wins 2016 Olympic Games
COPENHAGEN — The Olympics were awarded to a South American city for the first time when the International Olympic Comittee voted for Rio de Janeiro to be host of the 2016 Games.
US, Cuba held extended talks
State Department Discloses 6 Days of Meetings on the Island
Olympics: Obama vs Lula? Chicago vs Rio?
President Obama will go to Copenhagen, Denmark, to counter Brazil's attempt to win bid to host 2016 Olympics. Lula says Latin America deserves a shot.
Honduras political crisis grows
TEGUCIGALPA, — The de facto government of Honduras expelled four diplomats from theOAS and threatened to shut down the Brazilian Embassy, where the ousted president, Manuel Zelaya, has been holed up for a week.
Honduras tense again
Honduras -- Ousted Honduran President Manuel "Mel" Zelaya prepared to spend a second night holed up in the Brazilian embassy as police fought running battles with his supporters and world leaders called for a peaceful solution to the dramatic standoff.
Brazil VP: country should build nuclear arms
Brazil -- Brazil's vice president says in an interview published Friday that his country should develop nuclear weapons. Other officials stressed that his comments were not government policy.
Lula defends Ahmadinejad’s nuclear goal
Sept. 24 -- Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said he will visit President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in Tehran next year and defended his relationship with Iran, saying he can’t judge its nuclear ambitions or elections.
Ousted Honduras leader returns
MEXICO CITY — Three months after he was expelled in a dawn coup, the deposed president of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya, sneaked back into his country on Monday, forcing world leaders gathered in New York to refocus their attention on the political stalemate to the south and presenting a new challenge to the de facto government.
Russia to modernize Cuban military
The chief of the Russian military's General Staff, visiting Cuba, says his country will help Havana modernize and train its military and that Moscow warships will visit Cuba soon, according to reports published Friday.
Colombia dismantles spy agency
Amid a scandal involving illegal spaying on government critics, Colombia´s domestic intelligence agency will be dismantled and a new agency will be set up to focus on intelligence and counterintelligence work involving national security, the agency’s director said.
Venezuela to nationalize coffee roasters
Venezuelan Trade Minister Eduardo Saman recommended that President Chavez nationalize two already-occupied coffee companies to ensure supplies and boost exports.
Colombia spying scandal intensifies
BOGOTÁ, Colombia — President Álvaro Uribe, the top ally of the United States in Latin America, is enmeshed in a scandal over growing evidence that his main intelligence agency carried out an extensive illegal spying operation focused on his leading critics, including members of the Supreme Court, opposition politicians, human rights workers and journalists.
Clinton warns on Venezuela arms purchases
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed concern about what she said was the growing number of arms purchases by Venezuela and the potential for an arms race in the region.
UN's 'cautious optimism' on Haiti
UNITED NATIONS -- Following up on a critical assessment made by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon last February, the United Nations Security Council met in a special session to hear a "status update" on the situation in Haiti.
Voters to give Latam political makeover
A dozen presidential and parliamentary elections in the next 14 months could halt the swing to the left and boost moderates.
Chávez backs Moscow on rebel regions
MOSCOW— President Chavez of Venezuela thrust himself into one of the most contentious disputes between Russia and the West , announcing that his country would become the third to recognize the independence declared by two Russian-backed rebel regions of Georgia.
Fernandez´s credibilty shattered
Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Argentina is failing in its efforts to restore credibility to the government’s inflation reporting, which economists say underestimates the real rate of price increases by more than 50 percent.
Liberals try to topple Canadian government
OTTAWA — Canada moved closer to its second federal election in less than a year on Tuesday, after the opposition leader Michael Ignatieff announced that his Liberal Party would no longer support Prime Minister stephen Harper and his Conservative government.
Calderón urges cooperation against Mexico ills
MEXICO CITY — President Calderón listed a catalog of misfortune that afflicted Mexico over the past year. In his annual state of the union address, he described a country tested by the global economic crisis, the swiane flu pandemic, rising drug violence, drought and plummeting oil production.
Chile orders 129 arrested on ‘Dirty War’
A Chilean judge ordered the arrests of 129 former security officers on charges tied to the disappearance of leftists and the slaying of the communist party leadership during the Pinochet dictatorship.
Colombia's lower House Oks re-election bill
BOGOTA -- Colombia's lower House has approved a bill calling for a referendum on whether to change the constitution to allow President Alvaro Uribe to run for a third term.
Latam summit assails US-Colombia military accord
South American leaders gather in Argentina to vent criticism of a planned U.S. military buildup in Colombia, a move threatening to spoil President Obama’s bid to repair frayed ties with the region.
Farming crisis batters Argentina
The worst drought in 50 years, combined with a drop in soybean prices and unpopular tax policies, imperils a traditional beef exporter.
US pact raises tension between Uribe, Chavez
A plan for Colombia to allow U.S. troops to use its military bases to fight drug traffickers has divided South American leaders, with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez condemning it as a U.S. strategy to dominate the region.
Mexico´s ambivalence on a drug law
TIJUANA— Yolanda Espinosa’s eyes darted this way and that. Her hands trembled. For Ms. Espinosa, a cocaine and heroin addict in desperate need of a fix, a new Mexican law decriminalizing the possession of small quantities of drugs had a definite appeal.
Russian nuclear energy aid for Ecuador
Russia will help Ecuador develop a nuclear energy program for peaceful purposes, according to a new energy cooperation agreement between the countries, Ecuador’s government said.
Bolivia struggles to implement constitution
LA PAZ, Bolivia -- Bolivians voted for a new constitution in January after months of wrangling that included outbreaks of deadly violence and turmoil that threatened to tear this Andean nation apart.
Honduras coup a precedent
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras -- Manuel Zelaya's chances of getting restored to the Honduran presidency become more distant with each passing week. Across Latin America, his allies and foes alike see a precedent being set.
Venezuelan education law critics defy it
Critics of a sweeping Venezuelan education bill vowed not to abide by the measure after it was adopted in a late-night legislative session.
Turks and Caicos: Britain takes over
Britain has imposed direct rule on the Caribbean islands of Turks and Caicos after an investigation found evidence of corruption among the territory’s officials.
Chávez: We're buying Russian tanks
Venezuela's president announced he would seek dozens of the vehicles in response to the 'threat' posed by a pending US-Colombia military deal.
Scandal pressures Sarney to step down
BRASÍLIA — The leader of Brazil´s Senate is under heavy pressure to step down amid a nepotism and corruption scandal that threatens to hamstring the government of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva during his final year in office.
Sotomayor faces workload of complex cases
With the Senate’s approval of Judge Sonia Sotomayor´s nomination to the US Supreme Court, the new justice will soon take on one of the most demanding jobs in the land.
Calderon/Obama meeting on drugs urgent
Mexican President Calderon´s waning political power heightens the urgency of a meeting with President Barack Obama this weekend where drug trafficking and border violence will probably top the agenda.
Cuba suspends congress, lowers projections
HAVANA — Cuba suspended plans for a Communist Party congress and lowered its 2009 economic growth projection nearly a full percentage point as its economy struggled through what President Raúl Castro called a “very serious” crisis.
Honduras Micheletti rejects Zelaya return
Roberto Micheletti, the leader of the de facto government, dampened hopes for a negotiated solution to the country’s crisis, saying firmly that he would not accept the return of the ousted president as part of a deal.
Venezuelan lawmakers to restrain media
In a move seen by critics as an attempt to clamp down on freedom of expression, Venezuela moved to severely limit the type of information the media -- or individuals -- can report.
Chavez 'freezes' diplomatic ties with Colombia
President Hugo Chavez recalled his ambassador from Bogota and threatened to halt Colombian imports after the neighboring country said anti-tank weapons found in a rebel arms cache came from Venezuela.
Honduras’s military backs San Jose accord
Honduras’s military said it backed “negotiations within the framework” of the San Jose accord, which included bringing Manuel Zelaya to power after he was ousted as president on June 28.
US military presence poses neighbor problems
A plan to increase the American military presence on at least three military bases in Colombia, Washington’s top ally in Latin America, is accentuating Colombia’s already tense relations with some of its neighbors.
Latam diplomat nominee blocked over Honduras
Senator Jim DeMint has placed a “hold” on President Barack Obama´s nominee for the top U.S. diplomatic post for Latin America over dissatisfaction with the administration’s handling of the political crisis in Honduras.
Chavez reviews Colombia ties over US bases
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez placed ties with Colombia under review after the neighboring country authorized the U.S. military’s use of bases for anti- drug surveillance flights.
Former President Fujimori sentenced
The Supreme Court sentenced former President Alberto Fujimori to seven and a half years in prison for paying a $15 million bribe to his former spymaster, Vladimiro Montesinos, in 2000.
Castro blames Bush for Honduran coup
HAVANA -- Fidel Castro blames the coup in Honduras on the U.S. Embassy in that Central American country and other American diplomats in the region appointed during the administration of George W. Bush.
Sotomayor: Identity wouldn’t distort decisions
WASHINGTON — Republican senators sparred with Judge Sonia Sotomayor over racial bias, judicial activism and temperament as she presented herself as a reliable follower of precedent rather than a jurist shaped by gender and ethnicity, as some of her past speeches suggested.
Chavez clear winner in Honduran crisis
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has been the clear winner so far in Honduras' political crisis, leading the hemispheric condemnation of the military ouster June 28 of President Manuel Zelaya while orchestrating Zelaya's most audacious attempt to regain power, analysts said.
Mexico's PRI makes comeback
MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's long-dominant Institutional Revolutionary Party promised Monday it has learned from the past and changed its ways, a day after midterm elections made it the largest force in Congress again.
Honduras settlement in Arias hands
July 10 (Bloomberg) -- A solution to the political crisis in Honduras has been left to delegations assigned by deposed President Manuel Zelaya and interim leader Roberto Micheletti after the two avoided meeting yesterday in Costa Rica.
Honduran rivals leave negotiations
SAN JOSÉ, Costa Rica — Prospects for a quick resolution of the political crisis in Honduras were thrown into doubt, as the two men claiming their nation’s presidency left negotiations only hours after they had begun and showed no signs of budging from the positions that have divided the country.
Honduras leader tries return
TEGUCIGALPA, — An airborne drama that held Honduras in suspense for most of the day ended Sunday evening with the ousted president’s plane circling over the airport here in the capital, where soldiers and riot police officers blocked the runway and used tear gas and bullets to disperse supporters who had awaited what was supposed to have been his triumphal return.
Two Hondurans headed for clash
Rival Vows to Arrest Zelaya on His Return
Kirchner concedes election defeat
BUENOS AIRES — Nestor Kirchner, the former president and head of the governing Peronist Party, conceded defeat in critical congressional elections that became a referendum on his leadership and that of his wife, the current president, Cristina de Kirchner.
Honduran President ousted in coup
MEXICO CITY — President Manuel Zelaya of Honduras was ousted by the army, capping months of tensions over his efforts to lift presidential term limits.
Climate-Change measure transforms US economy
President Obama said climate- change legislation passed by the U.S. House yesterday would help transform the nation’s economy and create millions of new jobs in alternative energy industries.
Honduras crisis over referendum
Honduras' embattled leftist president, fighting for a chance to revamp the constitution, hurled insults at congressional leaders fter After rejecting the Supreme Court's order to reinstate the military chief he had fired President Manuel Zelaya is promoting a referendum on constitutional reforms that has plunged the country into crisis by setting the president at odds with the military, the courts and the legislature that have branded the vote illegal.
U.S., Venezuela restore full diplomatic ties
The nations' envoys soon will take up their former posts. The move, analysts say, reflects Obama's desire for better Latin American relations and President Hugo Chavez's need to improve his image.
Crime threatens México democracy
President Calderón said that the future of democracy in México was at stake in the government’s fight against official corruption and organized crime. He also criticized politicians whom he accused of wanting to return to the era when drug gangs were tolerated.
Iran: no new vote, opponents shift tactics
June 23 (Bloomberg) -- Iran’s top electoral body ruled out annulling President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad´s disputed re-election as the mass demonstrations of last week dissipated in the face of a security crackdown.
Green coalition gathers strength in Europe
BRUSSELS — One of the real victors in this month’s elections for the European Parlament is a 64-year-old former radical, an ebullient Franco-German who has turned his efforts to transform society from revolution to ecology.
Colombia coca growing declines
Cultivation of coca, the plant used to produce cocaine, fell 18 percent in Colombia last year, largely because of manual eradication efforts, the United Nations said in a recently published report.
Emerging economies meet in Russia
YEKATERINBURG, Russia— Leaders of the four largest emerging market economies discussed ways to reduce their reliance on the United States at their first of developing countries in global formal summit meeting on Tuesday. But they concluded with only a cautious statement suggesting a move away from the dollar´s role in global commerce and a call for greater representation financial institutions.
Duhalde blasts Kirchner lack of planning
Former caretaker president Eduardo Duhalde returned to the public eye to denounce the lack of a "strategic planning" in the country, in a renewed critic to the government that came less then a month ahead of the congressional elections.
Military targets Chávez critics in its ranks
Venezuelan army officers and soldiers are upset by a military order that requires the reporting of all comments critical of President Hugo Chávez.
Cuba rejects rejoining OAS
Cuba won't be rejoining the Organization of American States anytime soon. The Cuban government disparaged the OAS as being anti-Cuban.
Cuba readmission changes relations?
Cuba has shown no desire to rejoin. Socialist states like Venezuela and Nicaragua say they want to form an association that excludes the US.
O.A.S. conditionally lifts Cuba suspension
WASHINGTON — After two days of intense negotiations, the Organization of American States agreed to lift a cold war provision that suspended Cuba from the group but also accepted a list of conditions, backed by Washington, that Havana would have to meet before being allowed to return.
Summit fails to reach accord on Cuba
SAN PEDRO SULA, Honduras — Thirty-four members of the Organization of American States gathered here to argue over whether to readmit Cuba. By the end of the day, the United States had failed in an attempt to broker a deal that would have lifted the ban on Havana.
El Salvador leftist president takes power
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador -- A journalist from a party of former Marxist guerrillas became El Salvador's first leftist president Monday, immediately restoring ties with Cuba while promising to remain friendly with the United States.
Cuba agrees to U.S. talks
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton brought signs of a thaw between the United States and Cuba to Latin America, as she arrived in a region increasingly impatient to see the United States repair the half-century-old breach with Havana.
Venezuela missile buildup has US on edge
Venezuela's recent weapons-buying binge has stoked U.S. fears that portable missile launchers could end up in the hands of Colombia's FARC rebels.
Lawsuits charging Drummond deaths
BIRMINGHAM, ALA.---Three Colombia labor leaders are long dead---all felled in 2001 at the hands of Colombian right-wing assassins near the Drummond coal mines in northeastern Colombia where they labored and led a coal miners' union.
Vargas Llosa: Venezuela Cuba-like regime
CARACAS, Venezuela -- Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa warned that Venezuela is headed toward a dictatorship under President Hugo Chavez, and the country may eventually resemble Cuba's communist-led autocracy.
Panama becomes next narco battleground
The heavily armed rebels usually show up in groups of 20 or more, dressed in green fatigues and seeking food.
Lula candidate's health an issue
BRASÍLIA — They call her the Iron Lady, the woman political analysts credit with helping rescue Lula da Silva´s second term as president of Brazil.
Guatemalan leaders murder suspects
GUATEMALA CITY — An average of 16 murder victims turn up in Guatemala every day, some shot, some stabbed, some bludgeoned, and only about 3 percent of the cases are ever solved.
US willing to talk with Cuba
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration signaled a willingness to reopen a channel with Cuba that was closed under President George W. Bush by proposing high-level meetings on migration between the countries.
Spain to limit reach of the Courts
MADRID — Spain’s crusading judges could lose their power to investigate human rights violations that occur anywhere in the world after Spanish lawmakers called for restrictions of the judiciary’s reach.
Brazil floods ease; 300,000 homeless
PEDREIRAS — Floodwaters receded somewhat in inundated towns across northern Brazil, but the number of people made homeless by the floods rose above 300,000, and two people were missing after an overloaded canoe overturned in swift waters.
Ecuador's Correa expecting easy win
Americas summit may lead to tolerance
Now comes the hard part for the United States: using the momentum from three days of diplomacy to forge new relationships with two of Latin America's most problematic leaders.
Fidel: Obama 'misinterpreted' Raul
HAVANA -- Fidel Castro says President Barack Obama "misinterpreted" his brother Raul's remarks regarding the United States and bristled at the suggestion that Cuba should free political prisoners or cut taxes on remittances from abroad as a goodwill gesture to the U.S.
Obama lifts sanctions against Cuba
President Obama announced a series of steps aimed at easing the U.S. relationship with Cuba, breaking from policies first imposed by the Kennedy administration and stepping into an emotional debate over the best way to bring democratic change to one of the last remaining communist regimes.
US targets gun flows to stem drug violence
Mexico City - In the latest flurry of activity to help stem the drug-related violence that has engulfed Mexico and begun to spill over the US border, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Attorney General Eric Holder are meeting with their Mexican counterparts today in the city of Cuernavaca.
Obama to loosen Cuba restrictions
President Obama plans to abandon longstanding restrictions on family travel and remittances to Cuba, an administration official said, fulfilling a campaign promise in a pivotal pivotal state and signaling a possible warming of relations with the Castro government.
Cocaine trade helps reignite Peru war
First the soldiers came to Río Seco, a coca-growing village in the lush mountain jungles of southern Peru. “They called us subversives and they opened fire,” said Benedicto Cóndor, 55, a coca farmer. They shot dead four people at close range, including a woman who was five months pregnant, witnesses said. Two children, ages 6 and 1, disappeared and are believed dead.
Hillary: US feels your pain
MONTERREY, Mexico - In her years on the political stage, Hillary Clinton wasn't always seen as the most humble of national figures.
Chavez tells Obama follow socialist path
Venezuelan President Chávez comments on U.S. President Obama and the state of the U.S. economy. He made the remarks on Venezuelan state television.
Drug violence tarnishes Mexico image
The US State Department has issued a new travel advisory warning of 'large firefights' across the country.
Cuba leader jolts government
Cubans complained that he had talked a lot about transforming the system, but that he had done relatively little to improve their lives. Brian Latell, a former CIA analyst who has watched Cuba for decades, said several days ago that “Raúl Castro may be showing signs of leadership fatigue” — a sentiment shared by other American analysts of Cuba.
Mexico drug cartels tied to protests
They kill. They bribe. They launder money. And now Mexico's drug cartels may have their hands in a new activity: street protests.
Obama makes overtures to Canada
OTTAWA — President Obama charted a delicate course with Canada, using the first foreign trip of his presidency to ease tensions over trade policy, climate change and the war in Afghanistan — all the while basking in his celebrity status in a nation where his approval ratings are so high that a local bakery named a pastry after him.
Vote lets Chávez run again
CARACAS -- President Hugo Chávez scored a major victory when Venezuelans lifted term limits so he can run for reelection in 2012 and perhaps beyond.
Venezuela opposition lacks power
CARACAS -- Shuttered, padlocked and sprayed with multicolored graffiti, Caracas City Hall is a forlorn sight.

Opposition Mayor Antonio Ledezma, whose name is featured in the graffiti -- usually accompanied by the word "rat'' -- has been unable to work there for almost a month, since a group loyal to leftist President Hugo Chávez occupied the building.
Colombia rebels free Ex-Governor after7 years
FARC rebels freed a former politician who had been held hostage for more than seven years,
Hostages release a sign of FARC change
From the moment Claudia Rugeles heard on the news that leftist Colombian rebels planned to release her husband after nearly eight years as a hostage in a jungle camp, she has been getting ready for his return, sprucing up their home and preparing herself psychologically for the reunion. ''I want him to find everything fixed up and pretty,'' Rugeles said.
Russia and Cuba revive bond
The presidents of Russia and Cuba signed a strategic partnership and several other documents on Friday aimed at rekindling an alliance that collapsed after the cold war. They pledged to expand cooperation in agriculture, manufacturing, science and tourism, but studiously avoided a public discussion of military ties.
Bolivians ratify new constitution
President Evo Morales seemed assured of an easy victory in a referendum on Sunday over a sweeping new Constitution aimed at empowering Bolivia's Indians. The vote capped three years of conflict-ridden efforts by Mr. Morales to overhaul a political system he had associated with centuries of indigenous subjugation.
Venezuela: Chávez's Plan Protested
The police used tear gas, plastic bullets and a water cannon on Tuesday to break up a protest by university students against President Chavez's attempt to eliminate term limits.
Chávez lets West make oil bids
— President Chavez, buffeted by falling oil prices that threaten to damage his efforts to establish a Socialist-inspired state, is quietly courting Western oil companies once again. Social programs like food subsidies, which these women in Caracas picked up, are financed by Petróleos de Venezuela's profits. Until recently, Mr. Chávez had pushed foreign oil companies here into a corner by nationalizing their oil fields, raiding their offices with tax authorities and imposing a series of royalties increases.
Chavez: Castro is 'Alive and Kicking'
Former Cuban President Fidel Castro is ''alive and kicking,'' Agence France-Presse reported, citing Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
Bolivia's new constitution to create 'Chaos'
Bolivia's proposed constitutional overhaul will create "chaos" in the Andean nation if it's approved in a nationwide vote on Jan. 25, former President Carlos Mesa said. The proposal, spearheaded by current PresidentEvo Morales, would increase the power of the indigenous majority by setting quotas for the representation of ethnic groups in the government. The quotas threaten the rights of other Bolivians, Mesa said at a news conference today at his office in the capital La Paz.
Brazil signs France arms deal
Brazil and France signed a defense agreement on Tuesday worth more than $12 billion that will give Brazil technology to develop its arms industry and build a nuclear-powered submarine, the two governments said. Under the accord, signed by President Lula da Silva of Brazil and President Sarkosy of France in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil will buy 50 EC-725 Super Cougar helicopters from France, and the two countries will jointly develop a nuclear submarine and four diesel submarines. Brazil is increasing military spending as part of a new defense strategy that emphasizes protecting the Amazon and newly discovered deep-water oil fields.
Brazil plans military upgrade
BRASÍLIA — President Lula da silva of Brazil unveiled a new national defense strategy , calling for upgrading the military forces and remaking the defense industry. The plan also called for a debate in Brazil on whether mandatory military service should be enforced and how the armed forces should be professionalized.
Richardson pick marks departure for commerce
With his choice of New Mexico Gov Bill Richardson as commerce secretary, President-elect Obama broke with tradition, putting a longtime public servant in a position that has recently been held by private-sector executives.
Canada Conservatives in danger of replacement
OTTAWA — The prospect that Canada's Conservative government could be replaced by a coalition became more likely on Friday following a day of negotiations and agreements between opposition parties.
Chavez again seeks indefinite re-election
President Hugo Chavez asked supporters to petition for a constitutional amendment that would let him seek indefinite re-election and buy more time to build a socialist economy in Venezuela.
Sea exercises, a sign for Obama
The arrival of Russian President Medvedev and a naval squadron in Venezuela this week is an unequivocal message to President-elect Obama that his most nettlesome challenge in the Americas will be Venezuela's populist government and its oil-fueled crusade against U.S. influence, political analysts say.
Considered Invincible, Chávez Takes a Blow
CARACAS, — From the hardened slums of this city to some of Venezuela's most populous and economically important states, many of President Hugo Chavez´ supporters deserted him in regional elections, showing it is possible to challenge him in areas where he was once thought invincible.
Morales won't let DEA come back
UNITED NATIONS -- Bolivian President Evo Morales expressed hope for improved relations with the United States under Barack Obama's presidency, but said he will never allow the U.S. anti-drug agency to resume operating in his country.
Gleeful to Fearful in Latin America
SÃO PAULO, As America's financial crisis was gathering speed, Brazil's president seemed dismissive, almost gleeful, about the troubles up north.
Mexico City struggles with law on abortion
When Mexico City's government made abortion legal last year, it also set out to make it available to any woman who asked for one. That includes the city's poorest, who for years resorted to illegal clinics and midwives as wealthy women visited private doctors willing to quietly end unwanted pregnancies.
Brazil's Indian reservation targeted for breakup
The future of Brazil's traditional Indian cultures was under challenge as Brazil's Supreme Court began hearing arguments on whether to break up a vast Amazon reserve.
Soldier wore Red Cross logo in rescue
BOGOTÁ, — A member of the military mission that tricked Colombian rebels into freeing 15 hostages wore the insignia of the International Red Cross during the operation, President said.
Argentina blocks farm export tax
RIO de JANEIRO -- In a crushing defeat for Argentina's beleaguered president, the Senate rejected Thursday increases in the agricultural export tax that have caused a farmer rebellion, with the vice president siding with farmers and casting the deciding vote.
Tackling Ecuador's refugee buildup
Hosting the most refugees in Latin America, the state is trying to speed up its asylum process.
Fear for hostages still in jungle
The nation is euphoric after intelligence agents rescued 15 hostages from the clutches of guerrillas last week, but for Magdalena Rivas, the outlook is not so bright.
Ontario to protect forest
The Ontario provincial government said it would conserve a huge swath of the province's boreal forest to protect polar bears and other animals and help fight climate change.
Bold Colombian rescue
BOGOTÁ, — At 5 a.m. on Wednesday, the sun had yet to peek through the jungle canopy in this country's Guaviare Department when the guerrillas told their captives to gather their belongings. A call had come in from a top adviser to Alfonso Cano, their new supreme commander. He said to move. Immediately.
'Shocking' rise in Colombia coca farming
Colombia's coca crop grew by 27 percent last year, the United Nations reported , calling the increase ''a surprise and a shock,'' given major U.S.-funded eradication efforts.
Argentine President seeks to quell criticism
RIO DE JANEIRO — Argentina's president, Cristina Fernandez , sought to cool mounting criticism over her economic policies, saying she would ask the Argentine Congress to legitimize the export taxes that have prompted three months of revolt by farmers.
Mexico: New legal system set
Mexico is adopting a United States-style legal system that will include public trials and a presumption of innocence for criminal defendants.
Former Mex Minister Wants US Reform
Addressing an audience at a discussion of his new book, Ex-Mex, at an event co-sponsored by the Migration Policy Institute and the Inter-American Dialogue, Jorge Castañeda called for a “holistic solution because piece-meal policies failed.” The next US president must seek a comprehensive solution that is both practical and effective, suggests Castaneda, Mexic’s Foreign Minister from 2000 to 2003.
Argentina farmers revive strike
Farmers resumed their national strike after the government broke off talks over a controversial export tax.
Manuel Marulanda, Farc top commander, is dead
CARACAS, Venezuela — Manuel Marulanda, the guerrilla tactician whose rise from peasant origins to top commander of Latin America's largest rebel group was a mythical feature of Colombia´s long internal war, died on March 26 in a mountainous hideout in the Meta department in central Colombia. He was believed to be 76 years old.
Colombia extradites 14 paramilitary leaders
Colombia extradited 14 jailed paramilitary leaders to the United States on Tuesday, in an effort by President Alvaro Uribe to take a hard line against the warlords and defuse a scandal that has tied them to senior lawmakers in the Colombian Congress and members of his own family.
With Chávez in check, talks in Peru stay calm
To the relief of organizers of a summit meeting here of leaders from Latin America and Europe on Friday, the encounter was notable for being relatively free of insults being flung publicly.
Ex-cleric wins Paraguay presidency
A former Roman Catholic bishop and self-styled champion of the poor broke the 62-year grip on the presidency by the ruling party here, the longest-serving political party in the world.
France to aid Colombian rebels' ill captive
PARIS — The French government said that it was trying to help a woman who had been held hostage by Colombian rebels for more than six years, and her son said that she needed an immediate blood transfusion to stay alive.
Farmers' strike in Argentina suspended
BUENOS AIRES — Agricultural groups suspended a nationwide farmers' strike that shut down highways across the country for 21 days and caused food shortages, in what has become President Cristina Kichner´s biggest test to date.
Argentine farm strike tests president
President Cristina Fernandez refused to ease tax hikes on agricultural exports T, facing down angry farmers embroiled in a nationwide strike that has all but halted production in one of the world's biggest beef-exporting nations.
Andean war talk gives way to pragmatism
Talk of war in the Andes has faded almost as quickly as it flared - showing that for all their bluster, none of the three leaders involved could afford a protracted confrontation.
South American crisis defused
After an angry start to a presidential summit, the leaders of Colombia, Venezuela and Ecuador buried their standoff.
Colombian attack sparks war of words
Venezuela and Ecuador took their growing conflict with Colombia to the diplomatic front, seeking international condemnation of Colombia's deadly assault on a rebel base in Ecuador.
Chavez warns of war with Colombia
Venezuela and Ecuador ordered troops to their borders with Colombia, sharply raising tensions after Colombia killed a top rebel leader on Ecuadorean soil.
Bolivia: Constitutional referendum set
The Bolivian Congress, in a vote boycotted by the opposition, approved holding a referendum on May 4 on a draft constitution drawn up by supporters of President Evo Morales.
Colombia: Rebels Free 4 Politicians
Latin America's largest rebel group, the FARC freed three men and a woman, all former members of Congress, held in captivity for more than six years after negotiations led by President Chavez of Venezuela.
Mexico to focus on crimes against women
Mexico has created a new federal position to prosecute violence against women and human exploitation, as rights groups urge the government to do more to investigate the killings of women, especially along the U.S. border.
Mexican farmers protest US trade
Led by a column of tractors, tens of thousands of demonstrators marched through downtown Mexico City to protest recent trade openings that removed the last tariff protections for ancestral Mexican crops like corn and beans.
Canada quits turning detainees to be tortured
The Canadian military secretly stopped transferring prisoners to Afghanistan's government in November after Canadian monitors found evidence that they were being abused and tortured.
Mexico hits drug gangs with fury
These days, it is easy to form the impression that a war is going on in Mexico. Thousands of elite troops in battle gear stream toward border towns and snake through the streets in jeeps with .50-caliber machine guns mounted on top while fighter jets from the Mexican Navy fly reconnaissance missions overhead.
Peru disputes boundary with Chile
Peru asked the International Court of Justice to set its sea boundary through waters claimed by Chile, inflaming a diplomatic dispute with its neighbor.
Colombian rebels free 2 hostages
Colombian guerrillas freed two politically prominent hostages on Thursday, handing them over to emissaries of President Chavez of Venezuela in a breakthrough in mediation efforts with Latin America's largest rebel group.
Bachelet shuffles cabinet
President Michelle Bachelet swore in six new Cabinet ministers in a shake-up she said was needed for ''the second stage'' of her government.
Canadian emissions market recommended
A Canadian government panel recommended Monday that prices be set for greenhouse gas emissions and that taxes, caps and emissions trading plans be quickly established.
After defeat, Chávez sweeps cabinet
President Chávez said Thursday that he would make major changes to his cabinet, including naming a new vice president, after a stinging defeat last month in a national referendum that would have greatly increased his powers.
Morales says States' dispute can be resolved
In this city 11,900 feet above sea level, the corridors of the presidential palace are bitingly cold. Aides huddle in overcoats near space heaters. Soldiers clasping rifles with bayonets stand guard with chattering teeth.
Tensions rise between Colombia and Venezuela
Nov. 25 — Venezuela and Colombia moved toward a diplomatic crisis on Sunday after an exchange of insults between President Chávez and his Colombian counterpart, Alvaro Uribe.
Colombia ends Venezuela's hostage mediation
BOGOTÁ- Nov. 22 — President Uribe withdrew his support late Wednesday for efforts by President Chavez of Venezuela to broker the release of dozens of hostages believed to be held by this country's largest rebel group, including three American military contractors who were captured in 2003.
Hugo Chavez meets with Colombian rebels
-- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Friday he met with a top leader of Colombia's second-largest rebel group as he seeks to lead peace negotiations.
Chávez to reconsider ties with Spain
President Chàvez warned Spain that he would review diplomatic and business ties with it, escalating a dispute that erupted when Spain's king told Mr. Chávez in public to "shut up."
Venezuela lawmakers OK constitutional changes
Venezuela's National Assembly overwhelmingly gave final approval to constitutional changes that would greatly expand the power of President Hugo Chavez and permit him to run for re-election indefinitely.
Argentine First Lady victorious
BUENOS AIRES -- President Nestor Kirchner and first lady Cristina Fernandez are poised to switch jobs in December, with partial results indicating Argentines elected a female president for the first time and launched their country's most powerful political dynasty since Juan and Evita Peron.
In Argentine race, a diplomatic touch
Cristina Kirchner Campaigns Overseas In Bid to Succeed Husband as President
In Colombia, a Washington sales pitch
MEDELLIN, Colombia -- The U.S. congressmen were speedily transported in vans with tinted windows, their convoy escorted by policemen on motorcycles who ensured that no car ventured close. When the lawmakers stepped out, guards carrying M-16s watched wearily, whispering into microphones on their sleeves.
Bolivian mob takes over busiest airport
Residents of rebellious Santa Cruz took control of Bolivia's busiest airport, ousting troops sent in by President Evo Morales.
Ontario votes to keep Liberals in power
On what may be a sign of what is to come in Canada's next federal election, voters in Ontario returned a Liberal government with a strong majority on Wednesday after a campaign that was dominated by religion.
Priest life sentenced in 'Dirty War' Killings
RIO DE JANEIRO, Oct. 9 — An Argentine tribunal sentenced a Roman Catholic priest to life in prison for conspiring with the military in murders and kidnapping during the country's "dirty war" against leftist opponents, in a case that has become for many a powerful symbol of the church's complicity with the former regime.
Venezuela and U.S. hold rare meeting
Correa claims win in assembly election
Results are not due for at least 20 days, but leftist President Rafael Correa already said his allies won the assembly election.
Rebels blow up pipelines in Mexico
MEXICO CITY, Sept. 10 — For the third time in three months, saboteurs blew up several pipelines belonging to Mexico's state oil monopoly, disrupting service to dozens of factories and briefly rattling financial markets, officials said, but not killing anyone.
Paraguay struggles with wildfires
Fires forced the authorities to declare a state of emergency in four provinces and scale back flights at the capital's airport.
Calderón assails US migrant measures
President Felipe Calderón harshly criticized the United States government on Sunday for the recent crackdown on illegal immigrants, saying it has led to the persecution of immigrant workers without visas.
Chávez to mediate hostage talks
Clashes in workers' protest
The police used tear gas, water cannons and clubs against demonstrators staging nationwide protests over government social and economic policies.
A Peruvian City Is Left Devastated by Quake
PISCO, Peru, Aug. 17 — No area along the southern coast of Peru, which was ravaged by an earthquake that killed at least 510 people, appears to have been harder hit than this port city.
Chávez´ 'Crazy Battalion' hits the road
"Surely they will take photos of us by satellite," said President Hugo Chávez, referring to intelligence agencies from the United States, as his Airbus touched down in this Andean city with the actor Sean Penn, a clutch of cabinet ministers and visiting dignitaries from half a dozen countries in tow.
Brazil crashes create anxiety
RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug. 3 — Alire Assis Brasil, in town to visit an aunt, waited patiently Thursday for her bus back to her home in Florianopolis — some 18 hours away.
Defense Minister replaced as Brazil air crisis grows
President Lula replaced the country's defense minister, whose duties include oversight of civil aviation. The move came eight days after the deadliest air disaster in Brazilian history.
Chávez's silencing critic causes uproar
Venezuela's decision to veto Transparency International's participation in the OAS sparked angry reactions and fears of a dangerous precedent.
Drummond Wins Civil Deaths Suit
Birmingham, Alabama---A US jury verdict gave Drummond Co. and Augusto Jiminez a victory July 26 to end the three-week trial charging the multinational coal company with aiding and abetting the paramilitary in the assassination of three Colombia union leaders in 2001.
Chávez's military strategy unnerves some officers
The outgoing defense minister has criticized President Hugo Chávez's military strategy, a type of dissent not seen before.
Colombia Widows Weep, Key Witnesses Missing In Drummond Civil Rights Killings
BIRMINGHAM,ALABAMA.--- Cinnamon-skin widows weep within a stone’s throw of the 16th St. Baptist Church here, the site of one of the most horrendous civil rights atrocities in US history.
Colombians focus of Drummond murders trial
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA---Two Colombians were the focus of testimony in a historic civil case here today (July 12) involving the assassinations of three union workers near the Colombian coal mines of Drummond Coal Co. of Alabama.
Brazil: $540M for nuclear program
SAO PAULO, Brazil -- President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said that Brazil will budget about $540 million over eight years to complete its nuclear program, including uranium enrichment and possibly building a nuclear-powered submarine.
Tremors in Chile spark fear, anxiety
More than 5,000 tremors have been felt since January in the Patagonia region of Chile, causing residents to fear that a cataclysmic earthquake may surface.
Mexico confirms attacks on pipelines
MEXICO CITY -- Mexico's government called a series of gas pipeline explosions a threat to the nation's democratic institutions and vowed to step up security after a guerrilla group claimed responsibility for the blasts.
US vibes toward Colombia's Uribe turning
Colombia's president used to get unmitigated praise in Washington. Now, relations with Democrats have soured and prospects for a free-trade pact are fading.
Stray bullets may have killed FARC hostages
Several sources say the Colombian government is considering whether 11 lawmakers, held captive by rebels, were accident- ally killed as vigilantes tried to collect a bounty.
Mexican left calls supporters to rally
MEXICO CITY -- The leftist who barely lost Mexico's closest presidential election in history is betting on a weekend rally to reignite his flagging political movement, calling supporters to an enormous march on the capital's central plaza.






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