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Countries claiming to be in solidarity with Venezuela’s president Nicolás Maduro are the nations taking in the lowest number of Venezuelan immigrants.

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The possibility of a train between Costa Rica and Panama, the strengthening of business relationships, and compromise towards the defense of democracy were some of the topics discussed in a meeting between the presidents of the two Caribbean States.

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Major coffee companies throughout South America are being approached by Tres Corações, the top Brazilian coffee company, as it looks to expand across the continent.

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The Venezuelan government accused Ecuador of igniting the persecution of Venezuelan migrants after President Lenín Moreno announced the migratory measures that will be adopted in response to a femicide committed by a Venezuelan citizen.

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Uruguay’s calls for a transformation of Mercosur are becoming reality as Argentina and Brazil now seek to reform the organization as well.

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Reports and interviews with the representatives of the Organization of American States indicate that the votes to invoke the Inter-American Democratic Charger against Nicaragua are essentially guaranteed, depending if Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador votes in favor.

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While former Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto was quick to criticize Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro during times of political scandal, newly elected Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) has chosen the complete opposite approach.

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Situated between the two largest producers of cocaine in the world, Ecuador has begun to pay more serious attention to its northern borderlands as narcotics-related violence begins to affect its citizens near the Colombian border.

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The former president of the Venezuelan parliament and fugitive, Julio Borges, calls for the governments of Latin America to cooperate in helping to eject President Nicolás Maduro from power.

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President of Mexico Andrés Manual López Obrador insists that his government’s decision not to sign the recent statement from Grupo de Lima regarding Venezuela was not one of friendliness, but an act of non-intervention aimed at allowing other countries to determine their own politics.

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