News from Saturday 23 March to 24 March 2002
President Bush Ends Latin American Tour
VOA News 25
Mar 2002 01:31 UTC
 
President Bush is due
in Washington soon after a landmark Latin American tour focused on unity in
combating narcotics smuggling and terrorism and increasing trade to boost
economies.
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| George W. Bush, left, and Francisco
Flores |
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On Sunday in El
Salvador, Mr. Bush capped the four-day tour by pledging to press the U.S.
Congress to approve the Free Trade of the Americas agreement to improve
economic conditions throughout the Western hemisphere.
Mr. Bush had a
working luncheon with the leaders from El Salvador, Belize, Guatemala,
Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Honduras and Panama. Officials say the leaders discussed
the separate Central American trade agreement that Mr. Bush proposed in
January.
During a joint
news conference, Mr. Bush thanked Salvadoran President Francisco Flores for
strengthening El Salvador's borders and putting a freeze on suspected terrorist
assets following the September 11th terror attacks on the United
States.
Saturday in
Lima, Peru, President Bush also thanked his Peruvian counterpart, Alejandro
Toledo, for support in the war against terrorism.
The U.S. leader also
met with the leaders from Bolivia, Ecuador and Colombia on expanding trade, and
fighting terrorism and drug trafficking.
During his
tour, President Bush also attended a regional summit in Monterrey, Mexico,
sponsored by the United Nations. In Monterrey, Mr. Bush said he would also
press Congress to approve an extra $10-billion over the next three years for a
special foreign aid fund for poor countries.
President Bush
dismissed claims by opposition Democrats that the Latin American tour was an
effort to gain the support of Hispanic voters for upcoming congressional
elections.
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