Latin American
leaders pledged on Wednesday to respect the right of all countries in
the region to choose their own political systems, a proclamation notable
largely for accepting Cuba as the only one-party state in the western hemisphere.
Cuba
is hosting a summit of 33 countries of the Community of Latin American
and Caribbean states (CELAC) who agreed in a declaration to "fully
respect the inalienable right of every state to choose its political
system."
They also agreed
"not to intervene, directly or indirectly, in the internal affairs of
any other state and to observe the principles of national sovereignty".
CELAC,
which excludes the United States and Canada, was the brainchild of late
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and created as a counterweight to the
Organization of American States (OAS), which has its headquarters in
Washington.
CELAC's second annual summit, a two-day affair, concludes on Wednesday.
The OAS expelled Cuba in 1962 for being communist, and also suspended Honduras after a 2009 coup removed the president from office.
OAS
foreign ministers voted to reinstate Cuba in 2009, though Havana has
declined to rejoin the organization, and Honduras was readmitted in 2011
after a new, elected government came to power.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/01/29/us-latam-summit-idUSBREA0S1LT20140129
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