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CHAT:
5th Summit of the Americas: Your Thoughts
April 17, 11:15 EDT (15:15 GMT - 12:15 Uruguay)
Share your thoughts and opinions on the Summit with others across the region before watching the Secretary's live Town Hall from the Dominican Republic. (Text Webchat)
http://statedept.connectsolutions.com/conx
WEBCAST:
Secretary Clinton's Town Hall Meeting
April 17, 11:15 EDT (15:15 GMT - 12:15 Uruguay)
Secretary Clinton to conduct Digital Town Hall of the Americas
http://townhall.america.gov/
CHAT:
Facing Global Challenges: A Dialogue with Youth
Ambassadors
April
17, 12:30 EDT (16:30 GMT - 13:30 Uruguay)
Immediately following the Town Hall, join us online for a dialogue with four Youth Ambassadors. This chat will be in Spanish, Portuguese, and English.
http://statedept.connectsolutions.com/wha
CHAT:
Future Engagement: Next Steps for Latin America
with Ambassador Shapiro
April 20, 11:00 EDT (15:00 GMT - 12:00 Uruguay)
Ask your questions about the progress made at the Summit and learn about future policy challenges. (Text Webchat)
http://statedept.connectsolutions.com/multilateralism
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Washington — The fifth Summit of the Americas in April
will promote human prosperity, energy security, environmental
sustainability, public security and democratic governance.
All 34 democratically elected heads of state are gathering
in Port of Spain, the capital city of Trinidad and Tobago,
for three days of meetings and talks on the future of the
Western Hemisphere and to examine political, social and economic
issues confronting the region.
The overarching goal of the summit is to improve the lives
and livelihoods of all residents of the Americas.
It is also President Obama’s first meeting with all
the leaders of Latin America, the Caribbean and Canada at
the same time. The president has met separately with Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Brazilian President Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva. There will be no representative
from Cuba at the conference.
FIRST SUMMIT IN 1994
Since the early 1990s and after decades of civil strife
and military rule in some countries of the region, 34 of
the 35 governments in the Western Hemisphere now have elected
democracies. And nearly all have moved from state-run, central
economies to economic liberalization and free trade, according
to Peter Meyer, a Latin American affairs analyst with the
U.S. Congressional Research Service.
“In order to build on these values shared by the
United States and Latin America as well as develop an agenda
for the hemisphere’s future, President Clinton organized
the first modern Summit of the Americas,” Meyer said
in a recent report for the U.S. Congress.
The first summit was held in 1994 in Miami. There have
been three Summits of the Americas since then — Santiago,
Chile, in 1998, Quebec City, Canada, in 2001, and Mar del
Plata, Argentina, in 2005 — plus two Special Summits
of the Americas and a number of ministerial-level summits.
One special summit on sustainable development was held in
Santa Cruz, Bolivia, in 1996, and a second in 2004 produced
the Declaration of Nuevo León in Monterrey, Mexico,
in 2004. Previously, hemispheric leaders met in 1967.
Meyer said in his report that some observers believe one
of the greatest accomplishments of the summit process has
been the Inter-American Democratic Charter at the Quebec
City summit, in which the Americas committed to a democracy
clause. The clause led to the Inter-American Democratic
Charter in September 2001. “The charter affirms the
peoples of the Americas’ universal right to democracy
and asserts that the governments of the region have an obligation
to promote and defend democracy,” Meyer said.
Another example of achievements is the plan of action that
was developed at the last Summit of the Americas in 2005
in which the countries of the region agreed to act in solidarity
with the Haitian people to improve democracy in the island
nation.
2009 SUMMIT
The 2009 summit’s theme is “Securing our citizens’
future by promoting human prosperity, energy security and
environmental sustainability.” The draft declaration
of commitment of this summit combines the traditional summit
declaration and plan of action into one document that proposes
65 commitments under broad themes: human prosperity, energy
security, environmental sustainability, public security
and democratic governance.
During a recent visit to Chile and Costa Rica, Vice President
Biden said he was there to consult and listen to the needs
of the people of the hemisphere. Biden said in an article
placed in Latin American newspapers that he was also helping
prepare the president for his first hemispheric summit.
(See: Biden on a New Day for Partnership
in the Americas)
“These meetings are an important first step toward
a new day in relations and building partnerships with and
among the countries and people of the hemisphere,”
Biden said. “The president and I understand that only
by working together can our countries overcome the challenges
we face. Today, we are more than just independent nations
who happen to be on the same side of the globe. In today’s
interconnected world, we are all neighbors who face many
common concerns.”
For more information, please visit the Fifth Summit
of the Americas website.