Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva apologized Friday in a nationwide address for a bribery and campaign finance scandal while the head of a junior party in the ruling coalition said for the first time that the president was aware of misdeeds before they occurred.
To counter the alarming increase in the number of foreign vessels fishing illegally in Australia's northern waters, Parliament passed the Border Protection Legislation Amendment Bill on 10 August.
Uruguay's National Directorate of Aquatic Resources (DINARA) is working on a strategic plan benefiting Uruguayan flagged vessels in the tuna and swordfish Atlantic fisheries over the next five years.
Lucia Hiriart, the wife of Augusto Pinochet who now has also been indicted on corruption charges has played a notorious public role gaining over the decades a reputation for arrogance, resoluteness and vindictiveness.
The Venezuelan government withdrew the diplomatic immunity of United States anti drugs officials working in Venezuela and accused Washington of escalating the ongoing bilateral war of words with the purpose of forcing a break in diplomatic relations.
Marco Antonio Pinochet, son of the former Chilean dictator Augusto, was described in court documents released in Santiago as a key player in the multi-million-dollar bank accounts fraud and a shady if not dangerous figure with criminal links.
The current surge in prices of the main commodities is one of the strongest in the post second world war period only comparable to the seventies when the oil embargo, said Patricia Mohr Scotiabank Group expert in commodities and industrial markets.
Argentina's Economy minister Roberto Lavagna said the country was on its fourth year of economic expansion and forecasted a 6,5 to 7% growth in 2005.
Tourism has become more resilient to the threat of terrorism over the past few years as the market's attitude has changed from fear to defiance, and last month's bombings in Sharm el-Sheikh are expected to have only a short-lived effect on the Egyptian resort, according to a new United Nations report.
The Mexican government admitted that corruption is an extended practice in the country, long rooted and therefore part of the national culture, and will take many years to eradicate.