The parties of Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and his predecessor Fernando Henrique Cardoso are set to duke it out on today Sunday in elections to fill more than 55,000 seats in the country's 5,562 municipal governments.
Rodrigo de Rato, managing director of the 184-nation IMF, and EU members added their voices to Friday's demand by the Group of Seven most industrialized nations urging the government of President Néstor Kirchner to strike a deal as soon as possible.
The annual International Monetary Fund and World Bank assembly ended this Sunday in Washington calling for an increase in help for developing countries and to take advantage of the current global economy growth to apply much needed reforms.
Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's Workers Party seems to have achieved significant advances in this Sunday's municipal elections, but will be forced to a runoff next October 31 to keep control of the country's most important city Sao Paulo.
Incoming Chilean Foreign Secretary Ignacio Walker who caused another serious diplomatic confrontation in the bilateral relation with Argentina when it was revealed that last May he wrote a column describing the Peronist party as authoritarian and fascist like and Mr. Kirchner as a populist was not actually the first choice for the job.
A possible resumption of Argentine-British talks next December in London at Under Secretary level could eventually help reach an understanding regarding charter flights to the Falkland Islands, according to Argentine Foreign Minister Rafael Bielsa.