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STRASBOURG, France (AP) — The European Union wants to complete new trade 
and cooperation agreements with the Andean countries and the MERCOSUR 
trading bloc next year, officials said Wednesday.
The progress of negotiations will be discussed at next month's summit of 
EU, Latin American and Caribbean leaders in Lima, Peru, said EU 
Transport Commissioner Jacques Barrot.
"We would like to reach a conclusion to that procedure in 2009," Barrot 
told the European Parliament during a debate on summit issues. He spoke 
on behalf of the EU executive.
The May 16-17 summit will focus on poverty, the economy, migration and 
climate change. The EU will push for Latin American countries to adopt 
stricter policies to combat climate change, saying that poor, and 
especially indigenous populations, are the first to suffer from a 
deteriorating environment.
EU lawmakers also demanded the fate of Colombian rebel-held hostage 
Ingrid Betancourt is discussed.
"Ingrid Betancourt must be released. All the other hostages must be 
released," said Martin Schulz of Germany, leader of the European Socialists.
Negotiations for a deal on closer cooperation with the MERCOSUR nations 
— Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay — started in 2000. Talks with 
the Andean countries, which want any agreement to go beyond trade to 
include social and technological cooperation, have also dragged on.
Peru has suggested a free trade pact with the EU excluding the other 
members of the Andean Community bloc — Colombia, Ecuador and Bolivia — 
claiming that the anti-free-trade stances of leftist governments of 
Bolivia and Ecuador are holding up a deal.
EU Lawmakers also asked for the political situation in Cuba to be 
debated at the summit but the Slovenian EU presidency said the issue 
will not be on the agenda.
However, a Slovenian official said EU foreign ministers will debate the 
recent political changes in Cuba at their meeting in June.
"I hope this will lead to a new common position on Cuba," Janez 
Lenarcic, Slovenia's State Secretary for European Affairs.
The EU's top development aid official has already said he would work to 
persuade EU members to drop remaining diplomatic sanctions against the 
communist island, after Fidel Castro handed power to his younger brother.
http://www.usatoday.com/money/world/2008-04-23-eu-trade-latin-america_N.htm
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