Latam summit overshadowed by Syria, trade and China

Young journalists club

News ID: 21701
Publish Date: 10:55 - 14 April 2018
TEHRAN, April 14 -Latin American leaders met in Peru for a regional summit on Friday that was overshadowed by Washington’s decision to order military strikes on Syria, prompting U.S. Vice President Mike Pence to abruptly leave the opening ceremony.

Latam summit overshadowed by Syria, trade and ChinaTEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) -Latin American leaders met in Peru for a regional summit on Friday that was overshadowed by Washington’s decision to order military strikes on Syria, prompting U.S. Vice President Mike Pence to abruptly leave the opening ceremony. 

Pence had been sent to the Summit of the Americas in the capital, Lima, in place of President Donald Trump, who decided to focus on a response to a suspected poison gas attack in Syria that killed at least 60 people last week.

But as the summit began late on Friday, Pence cut short his participation to race to his hotel, arriving in time to make secure calls to Republican and Democratic congressional leaders before the strikes started.

Within an hour, the attacks had ended and Pence planned to return to a banquet at Peru’s presidential palace with other leaders from the region.

Despite Trump’s absence, U.S. officials sought to use the summit to counter China’s rising influence in Latin America and condemn Venezuela’s government.

Syria is also on the agenda now. Pence’s deputy chief of staff, Jarrod Agen, told Reuters he planned to discuss the strikes in his speech on Saturday and in meetings with leaders.

Earlier on Friday, Pence met Venezuelan opposition leaders and announced $16 million in aid to help Venezuelan migrants who have fled their country’s severe economic crisis.

A dozen countries in the region have already been turning up the pressure on socialist Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, and are expected to back a statement on the sidelines of the summit condemning the widely-criticized May 20 election.

But there was less agreement with Washington on trade.

Chile’s President Sebastian Pinera, part of a conservative shift in South America in recent years, recalled how free trade was celebrated across the region at the first Summit of the Americas in 1994.

Source:Reuters

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