(Reuters) -
The Mercosur trade bloc - which includes regional heavyweights Brazil and
Argentina - will make Venezuela a full member next month, uniting South
America's biggest grains and energy exporters.
At a
presidential summit on Friday, Mercosur's leftist leaders also decided to
extend Paraguay's suspension over the ouster of President Fernando Lugo until
democracy is restored via new elections, scheduled for April 2013.
No economic
sanctions were adopted against Paraguay but its officials will be banned from
participating in Mercosur meetings. The suspension opened the way for Venezuela
to be incorporated into the bloc since opposition in Paraguay's Congress was
the only remaining obstacle after a six-year wait.
Brazilian
President Dilma Rousseff praised the joining of forces, saying "food and
energy security are becoming more and more relevant" globally.
The
Mercosur customs union - which groups Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay -
also agreed to allow individual members to raise tariffs on imports from
outside the bloc to up to 35 percent on 200 products to protect local industry.
This
doubled the number agreed in December and reflected worries that dumping could
increase as global growth drags.
Argentine
President Cristina Fernandez called on South America to band together more
broadly to better confront global economic woes, just after making the
announcement on Venezuela's membership.
Venezuela
has the world's biggest crude oil reserves and belongs to OPEC. Socialist
firebrand Hugo Chavez has governed there since 1999 and he is running for
re-election again this year, despite his battle with cancer.
The Andean
nation will be fully incorporated into Mercosur on July 31 at a meeting in Rio
de Janeiro.
"This
is a historic day for ... integration," Chavez told Telesur television
station by telephone. "This is win-win for everybody."
Alicia
Barcena, head of the United Nations' Economic Commission for Latin America and
the Caribbean, said she viewed the move positively.
"Mercosur
has a third of the world's water reserves, a third of arable lands, more than
45 percent of soy production ... and now with Venezuela's incorporation there's
an expectation that energy integration could increase," she said on the
sidelines of the summit in the western Argentine city of Mendoza.
INFIGHTING,
CHINA
Being a
full member of Mercosur requires that countries end tariffs between member
states and adopt a common tariff that ranges up to 20 percent, with some
exceptions.
The bloc is
rife with internal divisions, however. Brazil and Argentina, which are often at
odds over trade, have limited each other's imports despite Mercosur accords
that promote free trade among member countries.
Argentine
officials said earlier this month that they had reached a deal with Brazil to
ease the entry of Argentine goods including lemons, king prawns and medicines.
However,
Brazilian Industry Minister Fernando Pimentel told Reuters: "There's still
no agreement that would motivate a change on the (non-automatic import)
licenses."
Chinese
Premier Wen Jiabao proposed this week that his country and Mercosur evaluate a
possible free-trade agreement.
Mercosur
did not address this in its final declaration. But a separate, joint statement
was later released, saying officials from China and Mercosur would meet to
"explore mechanisms and actions aimed at increasing and facilitating
trade."
Analysts
say Brazil and Argentina would probably be wary of a deal with China as both
nations take protectionist measures aimed at shielding local industry from
imported goods.
PARAGUAY
PUNISHED
Paraguay's
suspension from Mercosur meetings came after its Senate dismissed Lugo from
office a week ago in an impeachment trial that lasted a matter of hours.
Neighbouring
governments wanted to send a stern warning about the consequences of removing a
democratically elected leader, but they ruled out penalties that could hurt
ordinary people in Paraguay - one of South America's poorest countries.
"We
are not in any way applying economic sanctions because our aim is to improve
our people's quality of life," Fernandez said. "(But we cannot)
tolerate these 'gentle coups' or movements that - under a veneer of
institutional correctness - shatter the constitutional order."
Paraguay is
a landlocked, soy-exporting nation of 6 million people, sandwiched between
Brazil, Argentina and Bolivia. It has a long history of political instability
and military rule.
The
country's new president, Federico Franco, was Lugo's vice president and one of
his fiercest critics. Franco has defended the constitutionality of the
impeachment trial, which Paraguay's top court upheld.
Just after
the Mercosur gathering, the UNASUR group of South American nations met in
Mendoza to discuss Lugo's swift removal, which was sparked by clashes over a
land eviction that killed 17 police and peasant farmers.
UNASUR also
suspended Paraguay, saying democracy was best defended through regional unity.
Paraguay's
new foreign minister said the decision to suspend his country from Mercosur and
incorporate Venezuela was "illegal."
"The
government deplores that other member states have sanctioned Paraguay and its
government so as to incorporate a new member before the conclusion of a
necessary approvals process," minister Jose Felix Fernandez Estigarribia
said.
(Additional
reporting by Daniela Desantis in Asuncion and Jeb Blount in Rio de Janeiro;
writing by Hilary Burke and Helen Popper; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

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