Leaders debate trade; Protests wreak havoc (AP) Updated: 2005-11-05 17:01
President Bush and Latin American leaders entered a
final day of talks Saturday to debate the future of a hemisphere-wide free trade
bloc, meeting behind an array of street barricades and armed security forces at
a summit tarnished by violent street protests.
Riot police shoot tear gas and
rubber bullets towards protesters during a march against the visit of President
Bush at the Fourth Summit of the Americas in the Atlantic resort city of Mar del
Plata, Argentina, Friday, Nov. 4, 2005. [AP]
As the summit's began Friday, rioters smashed the glass storefronts of at
least 30 businesses, set fire to a bank and battled police with slingshots and
rocks. Police fought back with tear gas and made 64 arrests. No major injuries
were reported.
The United States is hoping to use the America's Summit, which ends Saturday,
to build support for reviving the Free Trade Area of the Americas, or FTAA,
which would eliminate trade barriers from Canada to Chile. It has stalled amid
opposition from Venezuela, Brazil and others.
The violent demonstrators failed to break through the first of several police
blockades protecting Bush and the other world leaders, and the summit's
inauguration ceremony took place without a hitch on Friday. Many of the
demonstrators believe meetings such as the Americas Summit that promote trade
liberalization aim to make the rich richer and the poor poorer.
"What I'm most upset about is that I'll bet you Bush wasn't even told about"
the riot, said Mar Del Plata Mayor Daniel Katz, whose seaside city has many
residents strongly opposed to Bush and his foreign policies.
On Saturday, summit negotiators are expected to draw up a summit declaration
that could call for relaunching talks on the proposed FTAA — an ambitious
proposal originally raised in 1994 at the first Americas summit in Miami.
Mexican President Vicente Fox said the FTAA proposal would move forward in
any event because 29 of the 34 nations taking part in the summit were
considering cobbling together their own FTAA — minus opponents like Venezuela,
Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay. The bloc would rival the European Union
as the world's largest, but its creation has been stalled for years amid
bickering over U.S. farm subsidies and other obstacles.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez emerged as the most strident opponent of the
free trade bloc, addressing more than 10,000 protesters hours before the summit
inauguration.
Speaking at a soccer stadium before heading over to the summit, Chavez urged
some 20,000 leftist supporters to help him fight free trade.
"Only united can we defeat imperialism and bring our people a better life,"
he said, adding: "Here, in Mar del Plata, FTAA will be buried!"
Chavez wants an anti-FTAA deal based on socialist ideals, and he has used his
country's oil wealth to build support, offering fuel with preferential financing
to various Caribbean and Latin American countries.
Washington seems little concerned about Venezuela's vocal opposition.
"It's become clear as the negotiations have moved forward that there is
significant support within the region for economic integration and for a Free
Trade Area of the Americas," said Thomas Shannon, the new assistant secretary of
state for Western Hemisphere affairs.
Outside Mar del Plata, other anti-American protests also turned violent. Four
police officers were injured in Rosario in clashes that followed an attack on a
branch of U.S.-based Citibank. And in the capital city of Buenos Aires,
activists tossed Molotov cocktails at two fast food restaurants and a U.S.-based
bank, among other targets.
In neighboring Uruguay, hooded protesters chanting anti-Bush slogans attacked
a series of bank buildings, shops and shattered windows in an outburst swiftly
quelled by riot police. Leftist groups were blamed.
Most Argentines seemed to reject the violence.
"I don't like Bush, but this is too much," said Ramon Madrid, a hotel manager
in Mar del Plata who hurriedly closed up after rioters smashed the windows of a
bakery three doors down. "There is no need for violence."
Graciela Tablar, a bank teller, surveyed the chaos in Mar del Plata after the
rioters fled and pronounced it "very sad." Tablar had taken part in the peaceful
protest march by some 10,000 people earlier Friday, but lamented, "the protest
people will remember is the violent one."
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