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Hugo Chavez told the second South America-Africa (ASA) summit, currently being held at the Venezuelan resort of Isla Margarita, that the summit would help the mainly poor nations improve ties and rely less on Europe and the
"This is the beginning of the salvation of our people," Chavez said in an opening address on Saturday to the two-day meeting attended by 28 African and South American leaders.
"The 21st century won’t be a bipolar world, it won’t be unipolar. It will be multipolar.
"The world’s powers want to continue to hold on to their power. When they had the chance to help us, they treated us like animals, destroyed our land. Now we have to fight to build our own power."
Trade boosts
The leaders are expected to put together a document backing stronger links between the two continents and urging global bodies like the UN and World Bank to give poor countries more power. Energy infrastructure development and joint oil project cooperation were the central topics of the meeting.
Rafael Ramirez, the Venezuelan minister of energy and petroleum, said that co-operation agreements will seek to build up domestic energy capacity and resources. "All the energy infrastructure, both in South America and in
A major oil exporter,
Chavez promised this month to build an oil refinery in
A draft statement from the summit also highlighted the need to create new financial architecture to regulate world markets in the light of the devastating economic crisis, and a rejection of the drug trafficking that plagues the two regions.
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the Brazilian president, said there was "no global challenge in the 21st Century that cannot be tackled by Africa and
Other leaders present at the summit included
Source: aljazeera.net