EFE News
Agency
Montevideo, December 8, 2005
The Secretary
General of the Andean Community
(CAN), Allan Wagner, affirmed that
Venezuela’s negotiation to become
a full member of MERCOSUR could
prove to be the initial stage in
the formation of the South
American Community.
"I consider
the decision an extremely positive
one, because that is the course we
must all take to build the South
American Community of Nations,”
Peruvian Ambassador, Allan Wagner,
assured EFE, on stepping out for a
few minutes from the Common Market
Council meeting in which the
MERCOSUR Foreign Ministers are
participating.
The bloc,
with its four founding members,
Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and
Uruguay, currently has as
associate members Chile, Bolivia,
Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and
Venezuela, although the Caribbean
country should become a full
member tomorrow, Friday.
The decision
will be formalized when the five
Foreign Ministers affix their
signatures in the presence of the
Heads of State, who will be
participating in the bloc’s
Presidential Summit.
The South
American Community of Nations
consists of the Member Countries
of MERCOSUR and the CAN, together
with Guyana and Suriname.
"Venezuela is
giving us a very important
opportunity to advance this [South
American] convergence,” the CAN
Secretary General announced.
Wagner wished
to make it very clear that
Venezuela did not need to leave
the Andean Community --of which it
is a member, together with
Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and
Colombia-- in order to become a
State Party of MERCOSUR.
"In fact,
this very day, the Venezuelan
Foreign Minister, Alí Rodríguez,
reiterated that the country has no
intention of leaving the CAN. I
agree with him; there is no need
for it to do so, and it will not,”
the former Foreign Minister of
Peru stated emphatically.
He went on to
explain that last year the CAN
approved a resolution authorizing
Community members to negotiate and
establish links with third
countries, provided that this does
not affect any Member State.
"We firmly
believe that the examination of
the process (of incorporation)
will produce the key to
harmonizing the legal systems of
the CAN and MERCOSUR so that they
can be South Americanized,” Wagner
added.
He was of the
opinion that it is necessary to
take advantage of the process in
order to ensure that “a single,
more complete South American
customs union can be fashioned
from two imperfect customs unions.”
Even so,
Wagner remarked that the most
important point is “the quality of
the integration process,” for
which he considers that
development and social cohesion
must necessarily be strengthened.
"Integration
must not be left a trade-oriented
process only,” he went on to add.
EFE