Uruguayan president Tabare Vazquez said he was most satisfied with the meeting Thursday in the White House with President George Bush, where it was agreed to expand trade and commercial links between the two countries.
Headlines:
Defence issues on the agenda for visitors; ?At risk' can keep cards; New Education boss; Tourism resignation; Seatbelts on all roads.
Tony Blair will carry out a wide-ranging cabinet reshuffle on Friday as he tries to fend off demands from Labour MPs that he must quit after the party's poor performance in England's local government elections.
Argentina yesterday announced that it had lodged a claim against Uruguay before the International Court of Justice in The Hague, protesting at the construction of two paper pulp mills it fears will pollute their river border.
Prime Minister Tony Blair fired his Home secretary and removed the Foreign secretary in a wide-ranging Cabinet reshuffle, an immediate reaction to Labor's pounding in Thursday's local elections but which also gives an indication as to the future leadership of the party.
Uruguayan president Tabare Vazquez gave further signals Wednesday in Washington of his willingness to have closer links with United States.
President Michelle Bachelet travels to Easter Island (Rapa Nui) today, Thursday, to inaugurate Month of the Sea celebrations on Chile's Pacific Ocean territory. Traveling with the President are Defense Minister Vivianne Blanlot and Interior Minister Andrés Zaldívar.
Speaking recently on the British Forces Broadcasting Service in the Falklands, Britain's Senior Soldier, Chief of General Staff, General Sir Mike Jackson, said that he hoped the inevitable interest in the coming 25th Anniversary of the Falklands (Malvinas) Conflict would not lead to an increase in political tension.
A Spanish fishing vessel owner charged with illegally importing over 26,000 kilos of Chilean sea-bass or Patagonian toothfish pleaded not guilty Thursday in his first appearance in a United States Florida court.
A group of former Argentine Navy crew members of the auxiliary ketch Penelope during the 1982 South Atlantic war were able to visit their old ship as it stopped over in Buenos Aires en route from the Falkland Islands to Germany after 70 years in South Atlantic waters.