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Venezuelan leader Maduro lands in Mexico ahead of Latin American leaders' summit

September 18, 2021 10:29 am | Updated 10:29 am IST - MEXICO CITY

Mexico has in recent months also hosted faltering talks between the Maduro government and the opposition

Mexico's Foreign Relations Minister Marcelo Ebrard chats with Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, flanked by his wife Rosalinda Bueso and National Assembly member and first lady Cilia Flores, at the Benito Juarez International airport ahead of the summit of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), in Mexico City, Mexico September 17, 2021. Photo: Mexico's Foreign Relations Ministry via Reuters.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro arrived in Mexico City on September 17, Mexico's foreign ministry said, ahead of a summit of a recently elected "pink tide" of leftist Latin American leaders.

The socialist leader will attend a meeting of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC), a regional body that Venezuela's late President Hugo Chavez helped set up in 2011.

The CELAC summit will also convene the "pink tide" leaders whose elections boosted left-wing movements across the region.

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President Maduro's arrival in Mexico comes hours after his Vice President, Delcy Rodriguez, landed in Mexico City to represent Venezuela at CELAC.

Mexico has in recent months also hosted faltering talks between the Maduro government and the opposition. Venezuela on September 17 said that the opposition is aiming to "sabotage" an internationally mediated dialogue process between the two.

Mexico's leftist leader Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will host the summit as his country, celebrating the 200th anniversary of its independence, is the president pro tempore of CELAC.

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In a show of leftist solidarity, Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel attended a lavish military parade at Mexico's 200th anniversary of independence on September 16 and gave a speech thanking Mexico for offering succour amidst a U.S. blockade.

Latin America's left made its greatest strides with the first "pink tide" of socialist leaders in the early 2000s. But some of those, such as Chavez and Bolivia's Evo Morales, have died or been toppled.

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