http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2008/diciembre/juev18/Latin-America-and-the-Caribbean.html
Havana. December 18, 2008 Latin America and the Caribbean reinforce regional integration COSTA DE SAUIPE, Brazil, December 17.- "The first Latin American and Caribbean Summit has concluded in this coastal resort with the conviction that the political, economic, social and cultural integration of the region constitutes a necessary factor on the road to sustainable development and the social wellbeing of its citizens." According to PL, in the extensive final declaration, heads of state and government reaffirmed their commitment to the defense of sovereignty and the right of every state to construct its own political system, free from threats, aggression and coercive unilateral measures. The document reiterates the disposition to establish a more just and equitable international order. Likewise, it champions the strengthening of multilateralism and confirms the urgent need to launch a genuine reform of the United Nations that will guarantee representation and democratization in its principal bodies, particularly the Security Council. The leaders emphasized the urgent need for efforts in regional cooperation, complementation and integration with respect to the energy sector, given the severe imbalances between supply and demand throughout the world. The dignitaries also defended the need for wide-ranging international dialogue with the active participation of developing countries in the context of constructing of a new financial architecture. Likewise, they emphasized the importance of and urgent need to strengthen regional and sub-regional mechanisms in order to promote integration and development in the context of the global financial crisis. During the sessions of this historic event, Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez urged the continent to create an Organization of Latin American and Caribbean States, a fundamental strategy for integration in the face of the current capitalist world order. For his part, Bolivian President Evo Morales affirmed that impositions from above and outside have not been solutions, nor have the formulas drawn up by organizations such as the International Monetary Fund or the World Bank. During his contribution to the Summit, Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding also called on those present to strengthen regional strategies in the face of this situation, such as the Rio Group which, he said, must become the driving organizational and institutional framework for development in the region. In a communiqué, Honduran President José Manuel Zelaya underlined that "this is a meeting to dignify the positions of Latin America." Included as part of the event at the coastal resort of Costa de Sauípe were the summits of the Union of South American Nations (UNASUR), the Rio Group - which officially welcomed Cuba as a full member of this forum - and the Common Market of the South (MERCOSUR). Translated by Granma International - Special Declaration on the Necessity of Ending the Economic, Commercial and Financial Blockade Imposed on Cuba by the Government of the United States of America, Including the Application of the So-Called Helms-Burton Act - Brazilian parliamentarians send document to Obama calling for an end to the blockade Ambassador Clifford Sobel
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