PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil - Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez heads to the World Social Forum, sure to get a sympathetic reception for his push to redistribute wealth from Latin America's elite to its poor.
The self-professed revolutionary was scheduled to arrive Sunday in southern Brazil to attend the annual protest to the simultaneous World Economic Forum (news - web sites) held for the planet's movers and shakers at the Swiss ski resort of Davos.
Tens of thousands of leftist activists are attending the social forum, railing against the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq (news - web sites) and the global spread of liberalized trade, a move they say benefits multinational corporations at the expense workers in developed countries.
Chavez sympathizes with those issues, and is trying to launch a "Bolivarian Revolution" in Venezuela, a political movement loosely based on the ideas of South American independence hero Simon Bolivar.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=589&ncid=734&e=1&u=/ap/20050130/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/social_forumU.S., Brazil Aim to Relaunch Trade DealDAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) - Brazil and the United States are exploring ways to breathe life into moribund talks designed to forge a free-trade region covering the Americas, senior U.S. and Brazilian officials said Sunday.
"They are certainly not dead," U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick said, referring to negotiations on the Free Trade Area of the Americas, or FTAA, an accord that would tear down trade barriers among every country in the Western Hemisphere except Cuba.
Zoellick met Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim earlier in the day in the Swiss ski resort of Davos in an effort to find common ground for the talks, which have been stalled for more than a year.
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Critics in both countries fear the FTAA would mean the loss of jobs and a rise of corporate power they associated with the North American Free Trade Area, which groups Canada, Mexico and the United States.
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