Business Standard

Chile cancels APEC trade summit, climate gathering as Santiago burns

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Chile withdrew on Wednesday as the host of an APEC summit next month at which the United States and China had been expected to sign a deal to ease trade tensions hurting the global economy, as raging street protests gripped the South American country.

The abrupt move - which came after weeks of riots over inequality in Chile that have left at least 18 people dead - left the Asia-pacific Economic Cooperatio­n meeting in disarray, with participat­ing countries caught off-guard and no alternativ­e venue lined up.

Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, fighting for his political survival, said he had taken the "painful" decision to cancel the summit, as well as a high-profile internatio­nal gathering on climate change in December, to focus on restoring law and order and pushing through a new social plan. "As President to all Chileans I must always put the problems and interests of Chileans, their needs, their desires and their hopes, first," he said in a brief statement at the La Moneda presidenti­al palace in Santiago.

The APEC summit was scheduled to bring together 20 world leaders on Nov. 16-17. U.S. President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping had been due to sign an interim agreement to end the 15-month-old trade war.

The cancellati­on might deny the two leaders a chance to meet on neutral soil soon but the Trump administra­tion said it still expects to sign the deal with China next month. A

White House official told Reuters that Chile's cancellati­on of the trade summit had caught the administra­tion by surprise.

The Chilean president did not mention a possible alternativ­e venue for the APEC summit.

Violent riots have left large parts of Santiago shut down, with the metro transport system suffering nearly $400 million in damage. A total 7,000 people have been arrested and Chilean businesses hit with l osses of around $1.4 billion.

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