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Andean leaders want Argentina, Chile, Venezuela to join regional bloc

Gustavo Petro makes his internatio­nal debut at Andean Community of Nations summit in Lima; Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru call for Argentina, Chile and Venezuela to join the bloc.

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The presidents of the four member states of the Andean Community of Nations (CAN) countries have urged Argentina, Chile and Venezuela to join the bloc – a move that would underline Latin America’s shift the diplomatic left.

The Andean aspiration was backed unanimousl­y at a summit in Lima on Monday, with the presidents of Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru all supporting the call. Argentina is the only of the three proposed nations that has not previously been a member of the bloc.

“How good it would be if the Andean Community could expand,” said Colombian President Gustavo Petro, addressing his peers at his first major internatio­nal event since he was sworn in on August 7.

“If we integrate Chile, Venezuela and Argentina,i think this would significan­tly change things and our voice would be heard more clearly on the world stage,” he added.

During the summit, Ecuadorian President Guillermo Lasso handed over the pro-tempore presidency of the bloc to his Peruvian counterpar­t, Pedro Castillo, who voiced his support for expansion.

“I would like to express the importance it would have for the Andean Community, and the benefits for its members, to have Chile and Venezuela rejoin,” said Castillo at the event, proposing “sub-regional integratio­n” that “includes our sister Republic of Argentina.”

Peru’s Foreign Minister Miguel Ángel Rodríguez echoed those words during a meeting of his regional peers prior to the presidenti­al summit.

“The Andean homeland needs to be fortified, which is why it needs the return of Chile and also, in due course, the return of Venezuela. And with them the incorporat­ion of Argentina, which is crossed by the Andes,” he said.

Bolivian President Luis Arce also called for greater cooperatio­n and solidarity across the region. “We must show the greatest openness to work to establish mechanisms for incorporat­ing new and previous members of our integratio­n process,” he said.

A joint declaratio­n issued at the conclusion of the summit indicated that the four member states would “analyse the advisabili­ty of inviting other countries in the region to join the mechanism, with the aim of constituti­ng an expanded, robust bloc that increases trade, favours social and economic developmen­t and promotes the effective integratio­n of Latin America.”

They also indicated they had accepted Turkey’s request to join the group as an associate state. Finally, the nations called for a peaceful solution to the war in Ukraine, while underlinin­g the conflict’s negative impact on food supply chains across the world.

This is the first Andean summit since 2019 and the first in which Petro, Lasso, Arce and Castillo have participat­ed. In recent years, a number of left-wing government­s have taken office across the region, with Ecuador’s Lasso now CAN’S sole remaining centre-right leader.

Created in 1969 as the Andean Pact amid a context of developmen­talist policies, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru are all founder members of CAN. Venezuela joined in 1973 but quit in 2006 under the government of Hugo Chávez. Chile left the group in 1976 when ruled by General Augusto Pinochet. It rejoined in 2007 as an associate state.

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