Tourism projects in Chile for 2005 totalled two billion US dollars and prospects of greater expansion are expected once the casinos bill is sorted out according to the country's Chamber of Commerce, Services and Tourism, (CNC).
A majority of Peruvians disapprove of presidents Evo Morales from Bolivia; Fidel Castro from Cuba and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez according to a public opinion poll released Friday by the University of Lima.
Chilean wine exports dropped in value for the first time since 1994, when the boom in international sales of Chilean wines first began.
The creation of a Parliamentarian Observatory on the Malvinas issue with the purpose of debating and promoting academic activities linked to sovereignty aspects of the Islands was passed Thursday by the (Argentine) Lower House and is en route of approval by the Senate, reports the Buenos Aires press.
The re-election of Colombian President Alvaro Uribe next May 28 seems certain according to the latest public opinion polls published Friday in Bogotá.
The Argentine beauty queen who last week disrupted a world leaders' summit in Vienna with a bikini-clad protest against pulp processing plants received an enthusiastic welcome in Buenos Aires as she joined new demonstrations Wednesday.
Uruguay has increased controls on third countries flagged fishing vessels arriving in Montevideo. The decision follows the commitment of Uruguay's National Directorate of Aquatic Resources Director Daniel Montiel at FAO Fisheries Committee meeting celebrated last year in Rome.
With obesity posing one of the greatest public health challenges of the 21st century, United Nations agencies warned Thursday that Europeans are in some ways eating worse now than 45 years ago, although agriculture and the right farm policies can promote healthy diets, such as eating more fruit and vegetables.
A five-day wave of violence and attacks with organized gang style executions, arson, and prison riots in Sao Paulo state, Brazil, finally subsided Thursday with a death toll of 138, --41 members of the police forces and 93 criminals--, according to the latest official report.
Mexican Congress members bitterly criticized Thursday the United States Senate approval of constructing additional border fences to curtail illegal immigration, arguing it would hurt bilateral relations.