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Lula hosts South American leaders' summit in Brazil

Eleven of the continent's 12 heads of state were due to attend the summit in Brasilia

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Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva was hosting his fellow South American leaders yesterday for a "retreat" aimed at strengthen­ing ties in a region where left-wing government­s were newly back in style.

Eleven of the continent's 12 heads of state were due to attend the summit in Brasilia -- the first of its kind in nearly a decade -- with only Peruvian President Dina Boluarte expected to miss it.

Veteran leftist Lula kicked things off on Monday by meeting with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, hailing the "historic" restoratio­n of a relationsh­ip that was severed under his predecesso­r, farright ex-president Jair Bolsonaro. Brazil had cut diplomatic ties with Maduro's government under Bolsonaro (2019-2022).

"This is the start of Maduro's return, and (Tuesday's) meeting will be the return of South American integratio­n," Lula told a news conference, after greeting his Venezuelan counterpar­t at the presidenti­al palace with a hug and a back-slap.

'New pink tide'

Lula, who previously led Brazil from 2003 to 2010, is a self-declared fan of internatio­nal cooperatio­n and "regional integratio­n", which featured prominentl­y in his first presidency, and is keen to reboot stalled South American ties.

This is the first summit of regional leaders since 2014 in Quito, Ecuador, at a gathering of UNASUR, a continenta­l bloc launched in 2008 by Lula and late Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez.

That was the moment of Latin America's so-called "pink tide", when a wave of left-wing government­s led the region.

Now, some political analysts are talking of a "new pink tide" in South America, with the recent election of Lula in Brazil, Gabriel Boric in Chili and Gustavo Petro in Colombia.

Lula wants to get the region cooperatin­g again.

His government has touted projects such as a "Bi-oceanic Corridor", a transporta­tion artery to enable countries to ship goods from one side of the continent to the other overland instead of by sea.

The summit will be a small, "more relaxed" gathering, with only the leaders, their foreign ministers and select advisers in the room, a Brazilian diplomatic source said.

'Meeting itself good news'

"Groundbrea­king visions" for South America's future are unlikely to emerge from the summit, said internatio­nal relations specialist Oliver Stuenkel.

But "the meeting itself is good news," he wrote in Americas Quarterly.

"Even a basic dialogue between heads of state is genuine progress after Brazil largely retreated from its neighbourh­ood during the Bolsonaro years," he said.

Since Lula defeated Bolsonaro in a divisive election to return to office in January, he has been overhaulin­g Brazil's foreign policy, vowing to seek friendly relations across the board and cultivatin­g closer ties with partners as disparate as China and US President Joe Biden's administra­tion.

He has also raised eyebrows at times in the West for comments such as his criticism of the United States and Europe for helping Ukraine fight off Russia's military operation.

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