Trudeau, Chile’s Pinera speak before APEC and climate summits cancelled
OTTAWA — Chile’s cancellation of two upcoming summits is a sign of a weakening world order that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his fellow world leaders need to confront, says the head of a Canadian foreign policy think-tank.
Trudeau spoke to President Sebastian Pinera on Tuesday, one day before the Chilean leader pulled the plug on the Nov. 16-17 gathering of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation leaders’ meeting because of protests that have disrupted his country for nearly two weeks. Pinera also cancelled the international climate summit that was set for mid-December in the Chilean capital of Santiago.
Chilean protesters have taken to the streets to decry a lack of income equality and inadequate public services. The unrest has included vandalism and arson and forced the shutdown of several subway stations.
Ben Rowswell, the head of the Canadian International Council, said the Chilean situation is a part of a global trend that reminds him of the Arab Spring uprisings across several countries in 2011. What’s different is today’s protests are taking place against a variety of governments whether it is authoritarian regimes in China, the Hezbollah-backed government in Lebanon, or Chile that has traditionally been a strong economic and political ally of Canada.