Ibero-American Summit

Meeting for Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Ibero-American Summit, formally the Ibero-American Conference of Heads of State and Governments (Spanish: Cumbres Iberoamericanas de Jefes de Estado y de Gobierno, Portuguese: Cimeiras (or Cúpulas) Ibero-Americanas de Chefes de Estado e de Governo), is a yearly meeting of the heads of government and state of the Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking nations of Europe and the Americas, as members of the Organization of Ibero-American States. The permanent secretariat in preparation of the summits is the Ibero-American General Secretariat (SEGIB).

Member states

The first summit, held in 1991 in Guadalajara, Mexico, was attended by the governments of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, Spain, Uruguay and Venezuela. Andorra joined in 2004.[1][2][3] Equatorial Guinea and the Philippines entered in 2009 as "associate members". Puerto Rico has participated sometimes as an associate member, but as it is not a sovereign country it is not allowed to completely join the summits. Belize and East Timor have expressed their interest in joining the summits, although they have not been allowed to join for the moment. All these countries were either Spanish or Portuguese colonies (Belize and the Philippines were Spanish before belonged to the United Kingdom and the United States, while East Timor was Portuguese before belonged to Indonesia, respectively). Other former Spanish and Portuguese colonies may join the summits in the future.

Following a proposal made by the Colombian President Gustavo Petro,[4] Sahrawi diplomat Mohamed Azrouk said that Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic will submit a request to join the Ibero-American Summit as an observer member.[5]

Expansion

Countries in the Ibero-American Summit as of 2022:
Ibero-American Summit, November 2007, Santiago, Chile.
Ibero-American Summit, 2008 San Salvador, El Salvador.
Mar del Plata Summit, December 2010
Ibero-American Summit, 2014 Veracruz, Mexico.

Summits

More information Summit, City ...
Summit City Country Dates[6]
1st Guadalajara Mexico July 18July 19, 1991
2nd Madrid Spain July 23July 24, 1992
3rd Salvador Brazil July 15July 16, 1993
4th Cartagena Colombia June 14June 15, 1994
5th San Carlos de Bariloche Argentina October 16October 17, 1995
6th Santiago and Viña del Mar Chile November 13November 14, 1996
7th Isla Margarita Venezuela November 8November 9, 1997
8th Porto Portugal October 17October 18, 1998
9th Havana Cuba November 15November 16, 1999
10th Panama City Panama November 17November 18, 2000
11th Lima Peru November 17November 18, 2001
12th Bávaro Dominican Republic November 15November 16, 2002
13th Santa Cruz de la Sierra Bolivia November 14November 15, 2003
14th San José Costa Rica November 18November 20, 2004
15th Salamanca Spain October 14October 15, 2005
16th Montevideo Uruguay November 3November 5, 2006
17th Santiago Chile November 8November 10, 2007
18th San Salvador El Salvador October 29October 31, 2008
19th Estoril Portugal November 30December 1, 2009
20th Mar del Plata Argentina December 3December 4, 2010
21st Asunción Paraguay October 28October 29, 2011
22nd Cádiz Spain November 16November 18, 2012
23rd Panama City Panama October 16October 18, 2013
24th Veracruz Mexico December 8December 9, 2014
25th Cartagena de Indias Colombia October 28-October 29, 2016
26th Antigua Guatemala November 15-November 16, 2018
27th Andorra la Vella Andorra April 21, 2021
28th Santo Domingo Dominican Republic March 24March 25, 2023
29th Cuenca Ecuador November 14November 14, 2024
30th To be determined Spain To be determined (2026)
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See also

References

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