Brazil to Chavez: Apologize or No Deal!

Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim Venezuela may need to apologize to Brazil's Congress if it wants to join Mercosur cautioned Brazil's Foreign Affairs minister Celso Amorim in an interview published Thursday in Brazilian capital BrasÀ­lia.

In May, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez blasted the Brazilian Congress for criticizing his decision not to renew the broadcast license of Radio Caracas Television, or RCTV, knocking the opposition-aligned station off the air.

Mercosur leaders have approved Venezuela's entry into the bloc, but the deal must still be passed by Brazilian and Paraguayan legislators. The legislatures of Argentina, Uruguay and Venezuelan already have given their approval.

"A goodwill gesture is needed," Foreign Minister Celso Amorim told O Globo newspaper. "No one expects an act of self flagellation from Venezuela, but a positive gesture toward Congress is necessary."

Chavez called Brazil's Congress a "pirate's parrot" of the United States and added: "It would be easier for the Portuguese empire to once again be established in Brazil than for Venezuela's government to return the concession (to RCTV)."

Several Brazilian Senators favor blocking Venezuela's Mercosur entry arguing the country does not comply with a clause calling for Mercosur nations to commit themselves to democracy.

Chavez is visiting Russia and will not attend the Mercosur summit going on right now in Paraguay. The South American trade block will consider his proposal for a regional development bank, "Bank of the South", an alternative source of development funds.

In recent weeks Chavez has criticized "oligarchies" in several Mercosur member countries that are purportedly opposed to Venezuela's entry in the bloc.

Also Thursday, Brazil's Lower House postponed approving two agreements recently signed with Venezuela, saying Chavez's government had shown a "lack of respect" toward the Brazilian Congress."

According to the Brazilian House of Representatives' website, one of the accords prevents double taxation on profits of companies operating in both countries. The other calls for cooperation in communications.

Mercopress

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilian Loan to Angola to Be Secured by Oil

The Brazilian government will grant the government of Angola US$ 580 million in credit ...

Brazilians Can’t Agree on Getting Venezuela Aboard in Mercosur

One of the questions on the table in Montevideo as the 29th Mercosur Summit ...

Murder of US Nun Deeply Shakes Brazil

Dorothy Stang, 76, a Catholic missionary from the US has been murdered Saturday by ...

Brazil Celebrates Record Number of Tourists and Tourism Dollar

Brazil has received about 3.4 million foreign tourists who spent in the country US$ ...

Cruise Liners Discover Brazil: A Quarter Million Tourists in 2006

The city of Rio de Janeiro, in the southeast of Brazil, is becoming one of ...

Foreigners Invest US$ 13 Bi in Brazil in 4 Months, a 26% Boost

US$ 12.7 billion entered Brazil in the form of foreign direct investment (FDI) in ...

11,000 Brazilians Found in Slave Work in 3 Years

The number of people freed from slave work in Brazil, during the first 10 ...

Brazil Goes into State of Alert and Uses Army, Navy and Air ForBushce to Protect Bush

BrasÀ­lia will be the site of the largest security scheme ever mounted in a ...

G8 Has No Reason to Exist, Brazil’s Lula Tells “Le Monde”

Nicolas Sarkozy, the president of France, and visiting Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da ...

Brazilians Don’t Protest in the Streets Simply Because They’re Happy With What They Have

What happened? Or rather, why it didn’t happen? There were only 150 “protestants” in ...