Growing mistrust in Bush's backyard
by Ann-Marie Michel, 29 October 2003
President Bush - thumbs down in Latin America
- listen to the interview, 3´40
US President George Bush may be surprised to learn that he's not very popular among Latin Americans. Despite speaking Spanish, an opinion poll in Miami, published this week reveals that only 12 percent of Latin American people think Mr Bush is doing a good job in the region. Mistrust ranges from the war on Iraq to US policy on free trade.
Lisa Howgard is the executive director of the Latin American Working Group, a Washington-based coalition of human rights activists, church groups and policy advisors. She says in great measure President Bush owes his dismal reputation among Latin Americans to the general US role in the world.
"Latin America has experienced the heavy hand of US foreign policy in the past. To see the US act first with force and much later with peace and reconstruction is something that doesn't resonate well in Latin America."
RN: "That's the overall political situation. I understand there are also concerns about the 34-nation Free Trade Area of the Americas, that Latin Americans feel they're being hard done by in the area of trade."
"That's an opinion that's widely held in Latin America, although there are certainly many Latin American governments and businesses that are actively seeking the Free Trade Area of the Americas. However, for many people the concept of free trade with the US raises the spectre of US products flooding their markets and undercutting the prices that their own farmers and their own small industries are receiving." (snip/...)
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