Dozens of Christian, Muslim and Jewish clergy marched in Washington to the U.S. Congress Monday to protest the proposed immigration-law reform, a day after huge demonstrations in several US cities.
With less than two weeks to the April 9 election Peruvian ultra nationalist presidential candidate Ollanta Humala remains ahead in the first round but looks like having problems in a hypothetical run off with runner up Social Christian Lourdes Flores.
Communication is the name of the game when travelling on the airbridge between Brize Norton and the Falklands, a group from the Royal Air Force have said, particularly if you have special requirements for the flight.
Brazil's new Finance Minister Guido Mantega said on Monday that the government's conservative economic policies will not change and called its primary budget surplus target sacred.
The United States Federal Reserve meeting for the first time under Chairman Ben Bernanke raised interest rates for the fifteenth time by 25 points to 4.75%.
The recently inaugurated Chilean president Michelle Bachelet said that for Chile to become a full member of Mercosur would mean back stepping.
Most Chileans reject relinquishing sovereignty over Bolivia's former coastal region, despite La Paz's demand for renewed sea access, according to a survey published Sunday by the daily La Tercera.
The Finnish firm Botnia yesterday announced it would stop the construction of a paper pulp mill in the Uruguayan town of Fray Bentos for up to 90 days, a decision that clears the way for a meeting between Presidents Néstor Kirchner of Argentina and Tabaré Vázquez of Uruguay on Wednesday.
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw announced Monday in the House of Commons the successful conclusion of the Gibraltar Constitutional negotiations on Friday March 17.
Chilean government halves gasoline hike.
Economy forecasted to surge 6% in 2006