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International News Updates |
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19 April 2009 Hugo Chavez, Venezuela's president,
has said his country will restore its ambassador to
the US, in a sign of warming ties between Caracas and
Washington.
Speaking on the sidelines of the Summit of the
Americas on Saturday, Chavez said that he had already
decided on a candidate to assume the post.
"I have spoken to Roy Chaderton [a former Venezuelan
foreign minister] and I have designated him as the new
ambassador to the United States," Chavez said at the
summit, held in Trinidad and Tobago.
"Now we just have to wait for the United States to
give Chaderton the approval to take up this important
post to direct a new era in relations."
The Venezuelan president made the announcement hours
after saying he had no doubt his country's ties with
Washington would improve now that Barack Obama, the US
president, was in the White House.
There was no immediate reaction from the US
delegation.
Diplomatic spat
The move comes nearly seven months after Venezuela
expelled Patrick Duddy, Washington's top diplomat in
Caracas.
Chavez expelled Duddy in solidarity with Evo Morales,
Bolivia's president, who ordered out the top US
diplomat in his country, accusing him of helping the
opposition incite violence.
The US administration, then headed by George Bush, US
president at the time, reciprocated by kicking out
both nations' ambassadors.
Relations between Venezuela and the US, its key oil
customer, have been frayed since Chavez came to power
and positioned himself as a standard-bearer for
anti-US sentiment in South America.
Friendly exchange
Chavez's announcement of better relations follows
several friendly exchanges between the Venezuelan
leader and Obama at the summit.
Obama met and shook hands with Chavez for the first
time as the summit began.
"We shook hands like gentlemen. It was obvious it was
going to happen," Chavez said after the summit
opening.
"President Obama is an intelligent man, different from
the previous one."
Later, Chavez presented his US counterpart with Open
Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage
of a Continent, a book by Uruguayan author Eduardo
Galeano.
"This book is a monument in our Latin American
history. It allows us to learn history, and we have to
build on this history," Chavez said.
Obama won repeated applause at the 34-nation summit's
inauguration after he promised to be an equal partner
in the region and expressed his desire for a "new
beginning" with Cuba.
"I think we're making progress at the summit," Obama
said, after meeting with key South American leaders.
The weekend-long summit is nominally to discuss
regional security and the global financial crisis, but
the issue of Cuba has been much discussed. |