Google – AFP, Tangi Quemener (AFP), 3 May 2013
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US
President Barack Obama arrives at Juan Santamaría International
Airport on May
3, 2013 in San Jose, Costa Rica (AFP, Mandel Ngan)
|
SAN JOSE,
Costa Rica — US President Barack Obama arrived in Costa Rica on Friday for a
Central American summit focused on trade and the drug war after a stop in
Mexico highlighting economic and security ties.
The seven
leaders of Central America, plus the Dominican Republic, are expected to press
Obama to step up US assistance against ultra-violent drug cartels that use the
region as a stopover for US-bound cocaine.
The Costa
Rican capital was under tight security for the summit, with a heavy police
presence, streets closed to pedestrians and cars, and shops and schools
shuttered.
Before
landing in San Jose, Obama addressed a young audience in Mexico City's Museum
of Anthropology, pledging to forge an equal partnership with his nation's
southern neighbor and put "old mindsets aside."
"A new
Mexico is emerging," Obama said after greeting the crowd with a few words
in Spanish -- "Mexico lindo y querido" ("beautiful and beloved
Mexico").
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Police
officers secure the streets of
San Jose ahead of the arrival of
Barack Obama in
Costa Rica, on May 3,
2013 (AFP, Hector Retamal)
|
With more
than 70,000 people dead so far in a still-raging battle between drug cartels,
the US leader acknowledged that "much of the root cause of violence"
in Mexico owed to US demand for illegal drugs.
"We
also recognize that most of the guns used to commit violence here in Mexico
come from the United States," Obama said, vowing to do everything in his
power to pass gun control reform back home.
The flow of
guns into the hands of drug cartels has been a constant irritant in Mexico,
which has linked the rise in violence to the expiration of the US ban on assault
rifles in 2004.
On
Thursday, Obama met with Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, who took office
in December, and the two leaders sought to shift the focus of their relations
back to their $500 billion trade ties.
But they
also discussed their security bond, with Obama backing Pena Nieto's new
strategy, which is focused on reducing the wave of murders, kidnappings and
extortion plaguing Mexico.
In his
speech on Friday, Obama said relations with Mexico must be defined by the
prosperity they can generate together, not the threats they face.
"Despite
all the bonds and the values that we share, despite all the people who claim
heritage on both sides, our attitudes sometimes are trapped in old
stereotypes," Obama said.
"We
are two equal partners, two sovereign nations. We must work together in mutual
interest, in mutual respect, and if we do that, both Mexico and the United
States will prosper."
Obama will
address much of the same issues during his talks in San Jose, including close
cooperation in combating drug smuggling at sea.
Obama's
spokesman, Jay Carney, told reporters that the US leader "will also be
discussing economic and other areas. So security continues to be a pressing
problem, but there are other topics on the agenda as well."
The United
States has provided $500 million in security aid to Central America since 2008,
but the murder rate has soared to 40 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants in the
region, five times the world average.
The US
military has sent ships to the Pacific and Caribbean to intercept drugs,
deployed 200 Marines in Guatemala and shared radar intelligence with Honduras.
But top US generals warned that budget cuts could hamper the mission.
"We
need resolute support from the US government to attack our common drug enemy --
drug trafficking -- since regrettably Honduras and other countries of the
region see the dead in a war we didn't start," said Honduran President
Porfirio Lobo.


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