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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews from Around the Americas | November 2005 

Battle Ahead at Americas Summit
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Anti riot policemen guard nearby the Hermitage Hotel in Mar del Plata two days before the start of the IV Summit of the Americas. US President George W. Bush departs on a five-day trip to Argentina, Brazil and Panama, after admitting that his dream of a free-trade zone stretching from Alaska to Antarctica is all but dead. (AFP/Juan Mabromata)
Foreign ministers from 34 countries are have begun talks in Argentina ahead of the fourth Summit of the Americas.

They are meeting in the coastal resort of Mar del Plata amid much uncertainty about what can be achieved on the summit's main aim of job creation.

There are deep divisions over free trade, with the US championing it as the best way to relieve poverty.

President George Bush is among those attending the meeting. He is expected to be targeted by left-wing protesters.

Thousands of people are due to stage a protest rally that will be addressed by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

Argentine former football legend Diego Maradona and Bolivian left-wing presidential candidate Evo Morales will also take part in Friday's demonstration.

A train that will take Maradona and dozens of other well-known people such as Bosnian filmmaker Emir Kusturica and Cuban singer Silvio Rodriguez is to leave Buenos Aires late on Thursday.

The train dubbed "Alba Express" will be joined by road by hundreds of buses carrying members of political and social organisations.

The caravan is expected to arrive in Mar del Plata early on Friday. Anti-globalisation and anti-US activists have been holding a parallel "People's Summit" there.

Poverty

More than 8,000 police officers are guarding the venue of the Summit of the Americas.

The rivalry between Mr Bush and Mr Chavez is expected to dominate the meeting.

The US insists that free trade is the best way to relieve poverty.

But the Venezuelan government has said that it will reject any summit declaration which contains references to free trade in the Americas.

Some 96 million people in the region are surviving on less than $1 per day, according to the United Nations.



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