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Jimmy Carter 'satisfied' with recall process - urges Venezuelans to trust the NEC's tallying*** CARACAS - Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter said Monday that despite opposition complaints, he is ''satisfied'' with the National Electoral Council's tallying of signatures demanding a recall referendum on Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.

Carter's three-day visit, which began Sunday, coincides with growing opposition concern over delays and alleged irregularities in the council's counting of the 3.4 million signatures that Chávez's foes claim to have collected last month.

After meeting with council officials and later with Chávez, Carter urged Venezuelans to trust the process and said he believed the electoral panel is handling the controversial referendum process in ``complete compliance with the laws and constitution.''

''The political future of Venezuela rests on their shoulders, and we are very gratified and satisfied with the performance of the CNE,'' Carter said, using the council's Spanish acronym.

Carter, who has long been trying to mediate a negotiated end to the political crisis racking Venezuela as opponents try to oust the leftist populist president, was scheduled to hold a news conference before returning to the United States.***

1,065 posted on 01/27/2004 5:46:45 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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State Department: Chavez, Castro won't derail FTAA plans AP - [Full text] MIAMI BEACH - The U.S. State Department's top official for Latin America said Friday the negotiations for the 34-nation Free Trade Area of the Americas would not be derailed by governments that don't fully support the trade bloc.

Roger Noriega, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, was asked at a business conference whether Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Cuban President Fidel Castro can influence other Latin American nations to lessen their support for the President Bush-backed free trade area.

''I don't think any one country constitutes a roadblock on the FTAA,'' Noriega said. ``We'll just go around them.''

Chavez, a friend of Castro, has expressed his opposition to many aspects of the FTAA and has been accused by U.S. officials of stoking anti-American sentiment in Latin America. Communist Cuba is not included in the FTAA talks, but Castro has been singled out by Noriega for promoting policies to destabilize democratic governments.

''None of us is ignoring the negative aspects and the penchant for some to fish in troubled waters and cause trouble for other countries,'' Noriega said.

Steps toward the creation of the FTAA would be in place by January 2005, a move agreed upon by nations at this month's Special Summit of the Americas, Noriega said.

However, Isilio Arriaga, president of Miami's chamber of commerce, said Noriega was too evasive of how the ''Chavez-Castro axis'' can affect FTAA negotiations. He pointed out that Castro and Chavez have been guests of honor at several recent political inaugurations in Latin America.

''For the ambassador to say that we're just going to go around them and negotiate directly with others is practically ignoring the very important influence that these two gentlemen have over the Latin American nations,'' Arriaga said.

The FTAA's stated purpose is to eliminate trade barriers and spur economic growth, but critics say it would lead to corporate corruption, the exploitation of workers and the degradation of the environment.

Noriega also touched on the sensitive issue of Haiti after a speech before about 150 people at the Outlook for the Americas conference.

Haiti has been in turmoil since Aristide's Lavalas Family party swept flawed 2000 elections. Since mid-September, at least 50 people have been killed in anti-government demonstrations. Aristide was planning to meet regional leaders Saturday in Jamaica to negotiate an end to the long-standing political impasse.

Noriega said the situation in Haiti was a high priority for him and that the plight of the Haitians could be compared with that of the Cuban people, who have limited rights of expression and assembly.

''They're similar in as much as they are both countries that are trapped by willful leaders who do not want to give people an opportunity to make decisions for themselves and plan for their own future,'' Noriega said.

However, Noriega's statements are contrasted with existing U.S. immigration policies with both nations.

While Cubans who reach the United States are generally allowed to remain in the country, efforts are made to return most Haitians who arrive illegally.

U.S. officials say they fear a mass immigration rush from Haiti, which they say would threaten national security, if Haitian migrants are given the same treatment.

Because of Cuba's communist government, the 1966 Cuba Adjustment Act lets Cubans be paroled into the community and apply for automatic legal residency one year after arriving, even if economics are the apparent reason for their leaving the island. [End]

1,066 posted on 01/31/2004 1:06:48 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
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