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----- Original Message -----
From: Jose G. Perez
Sent: Thursday, December 13, 2001 8:22 AM
Subject: [CubaNews] More AP goofiness on the FTAA Caribbean summit


[There they go again! The AP keeps on pretending that what the Caribbean
summit supported is the US proposals for what a free trade area of the
americas, and thus finds a contradiction between the statements of Fidel and
Ch�vez, on the one hand, and the summit statement, on the other. In fact,
there is no contradiction. Moreover, the report lapses from mere confusion
to total fiction when it starts talking about "the proposed treaty." There
is in fact no such treaty, proposed or otherwise. One would have to be
negotiated. What the summit did is present in a positive way some of the
Caribbean's goals in such a negotiation. And what Ch�vez and Fidel are doing
is educating people about what this means vis-a-vis what imperialism wants,
which is the opposite of what the countries of the Thrd World want, although
it would be impolitic to say so in an official summit declaration.]

*  *  *

Castro Warns on Americas Trade Plan

By FABIOLA SANCHEZ, Associated Press Writer

PORLAMAR, Venezuela (AP) - After signing a summit declaration that supports
a U.S.-sponsored Free Trade Area of the Americas, Cuban President Fidel
Castro (news - web sites) warned that the proposed treaty could lead to U.S.
domination of Latin America.

``There is a plot to impose by economic force ... not only an economic, but
a global political order,'' Castro said after Wednesday's conclusion of the
Association of Caribbean States summit.

``One day, all of our countries - excepting Cuba because (Washington),
luckily, doesn't want it - could be involved in a large deal in which
everyone is compromised'' by developed nations' might, Castro said.

Cuba, which has faced four decades of U.S. economic sanctions imposed
because of its communist rule, is excluded from negotiations to establish
the free trade zone from Alaska to Argentina in 2005.

An ACS declaration signed by Castro expresses support for the FTAA - as long
as developed nations' barriers to products such as agricultural and textile
imports from developing nations are eliminated. That would provide
impoverished Latin nations a better chance to compete.

But Castro later said millions of Latin Americans are heading for ``a
destination they know nothing about.'' Accusing leaders of keeping details
on treaty negotiations secret, he urged the region's governments to educate
their citizens about the deal.

U.S. workers know more about FTAA than their Latin counterparts because
thousands of them lost jobs to cheaper Mexican labor when the North American
Free Trade Agreement was enacted, Castro said.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez supported Castro's criticism. He suggested
that the region consider an alternative. And he pledged to put any FTAA to a
popular vote in Venezuela.

Another dissenting voice was Guyanese President Bharrat Jagdeo, who said his
government wouldn't sign a deal without ``preferential and distinguishing
treatment'' for Latin and Caribbean economies.

``If these conditions don't meet with our satisfaction ... we simply will be
ignored,'' Jagdeo said.

During the two-day summit on Margarita Island, Caribbean leaders called for
FTAA negotiations to end by January 2005 and the free trade zone be opened
by December 2005.

They denounced the U.S. economic sanctions against Cuba, but pledged their
continuing support for the fight against terrorism. They also vowed to
jointly promote Caribbean tourism, a vital industry that has suffered since
the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the United States.

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