Word: canc
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...meeting has no formal agenda. There will be no final communique. Few of the participants expect much in the way of concrete results. Then why are 22 heads of government,* 1,000 ministers and aides and more than 2,500 journalists converging on the Mexican resort island of Cancún this week for the International Meeting on Cooperation and Development conference...
...some of the more militant Third World leaders, the Cancún session will be another pulpit from which to bully the industrialized nations for their real and imagined imperialist sins. For others, it will be a chance to lobby face-to-face for change in a world economic order that is stacked against the poorer nations. For Ronald Reagan, it will be an occasion to hold up the U.S. example of free enterprise as the path to development and prosperity. It will also give him an opportunity to meet some important foreign leaders for the first time...
...main idea behind the summit, that the industrialized world must help the underdeveloped countries climb out of poverty, has been an article of Third World policy for decades. The immediate inspiration for Cancún came from a report published last year by an 18-member independent commission on international development headed by former West German Chancellor Willy Brandt. Among its proposals: major aid transfers to the Third World; reform of international lending agencies to provide cheaper credit to the Third World; stabilization of oil and commodity prices to benefit the developing countries. The Brandt report also urged that leaders...
...initial U.S. response to a North-South summit was cool. The Reagan Administration opposes the Third World's demand for "global negotiations" under U.N. auspices-an idea that will be strongly promoted at Cancún. Nor is the Administration, with its emphasis on economic retrenchment at home, enthusiastic about debating vast new outlays of foreign aid (now running at about $6 billion a year). The Reagan team, moreover, views foreign aid as an adjunct of its military and political policies, rewarding more on the basis of friendship than need...
Determined lobbying from Mexico's President Jose Lopez Portillo, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau helped persuade Reagan to attend Cancún. But he had conditions: Cuba's Fidel Castro must not attend, the meeting should not be held before the Ottawa summit, and there must be no fixed agenda...