Latin American and Caribbean Congress in Solidarity with Puerto Rico's Independence
The Latin American and Caribbean Congress in Solidarity with the Independence of Puerto Rico consisted in an international summit held at Panama City, Panama. More than two-hundred delegates hailing from twenty-two different countries in the American hemisphere met on Thanksgiving weekend of 2006 (November 18-19) to discuss the neighboring Latin American nation’s struggle for independence. [1]
The Congress was organized and sponsored by Panama President Martín Torrijos’s governmental Revolutionary Democratic Party (PRD) and the Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP).
Latin American and Caribbean Congress in Solidarity with Puerto Rico's Independence | |
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Leader | Rubén Berríos Martínez |
Founded | October, 1946 |
Headquarters | San Juan, Puerto Rico |
Ideology | National Liberation Movement, Social liberalism, Social democracy, Pan-Latin Americanism |
International affiliation | Socialist International (SI) |
Colours | Green & White |
Website | |
Official Website of the Puerto Rican Independence Party |
In the words of President Torrijos, "Puerto Rico is to this day the only Latin American nation remaining under a colonial regime. From the perspective of Latin Americans, assisting in the effort to mend that anomaly is a matter of principles, a continental priority".
Torrijos stated that Latin Americans cannot continue being indifferent to said reality. Moreover, the aforementioned dignitary claimed that it is the duty of all Latin Americans to take part actively in its adequate solution.
Rubén Berríos, President of the Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP), informed of a plan to create committees of solidarity with the island-nation of Puerto Rico throughout the dozens of countries of the region, which are spread throughout two continents (North America and South America, as well as in the Caribbean Basin region.
The Congress’ participants included fifteen incumbent-governmental parties that, together with dozens of other Latin American political parties, unanimously approved a Proclamation calling for the United States to immediately respect Puerto Rico’s right to independence and unabridged sovereignty. This proclamation quickly became known as the Panama Proclamation in international circles.
Also present to support Puerto Rico’s independence were Raúl Alfonsín, ex-President of Argentina; Tomás Borge of Nicaragua; and, Ricardo Alarcón of Cuba.
Sources:
- [1] Dominican Today daily newspaper
- Prensa Latina daily newspaper
- Panama Proclamation - full text available to reado and/or print
- ^ "Panama requests Latin America to support Puerto Rican independence". Dominican Today. 2006-10-19. Retrieved 2007-03-09.
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