US President Barack Obama has told
Latin American leaders that the days when his country could freely
interfere in regional affairs are past.
He was speaking just before the seventh Summit of the Americas in Panama City.
Mr
Obama and Cuban leader Raul Castro shook hands as the opening ceremony
began, their first encounter since a December detente.
But their historic formal talks due on Saturday could be overshadowed by tensions between Venezuela and the US.
Mr
Obama told a forum of civil society leaders in Panama City that "the
days in which our agenda in this hemisphere presumed that the United
States could meddle with impunity, those days are past".
Bumpy ride
At
past Summits of the Americas, which bring together the leaders of
North, Central and South America, the US has come in for criticism for
its embargo against Cuba and its objection to having Cuba participate in
the gatherings.
This seventh summit is the first which Cuba will
attend and much of the attention will be focussed on the body language
between the former foes.
Barack Obama and Raul Castro are due to meet again later on Saturday.
It will be the first formal encounter between the leaders of the US and
Communist-run Cuba in more than five decades.
Before the summit
began, the US president stressed that he hoped the thaw in relations
would improve the lives of the Cuban people.
"Not because it's
imposed by us, the United States, but through the talent and ingenuity
and aspiration and the conversation among Cubans, among all walks of
life. So they can decide what is the best course of prosperity."
Later, Mr Obama and Mr Castro joined representatives from 35 nations for the summit's inauguration ceremony.
A marching band and children in national dress of the participating countries waved flags as the summit opened to applause.
Analysis: Vanessa Buschschluter, BBC News, Panama City
While
Mr Obama name-checked Cuba when he was talking about the US's days of
meddling being in the past, the message was equally - if not more so -
aimed at Venezuela.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has not only accused the US of meddling but of fomenting a coup against his government.
His open distrust of Mr Obama was only heightened when the US
president signed an executive order last month declaring Venezuela a
threat the the national security of the US.
US officials have since said the wording was "completely pro-forma" but the damage had been done.
It had not only incensed Mr Maduro but also Latin American leaders sensitive to what they see as US imperialist rhetoric.
The
tone of the summit could well hang on whether Mr Obama's latest
assurances sway Mr Maduro and his left-wing allies, who form a powerful
bloc at the summit. Mr
Obama's speech before the summit came a day after the State Department
recommended that Cuba be removed from the US lists of countries which
sponsor terrorism.
Its presence on the list has been one of the main hurdles on the way to closer ties between the two countries.
The
president said on Thursday that all he was waiting for now was a
recommendation from his advisers, leaving many expecting an announcement
at the summit.
The smooth progress made between Cuba and the US
stands in contrast to the bumpy ride that have been relations between
Venezuela and the US over the past months.
The two countries have not exchanged ambassadors for more than six
years, but tensions rose last month when the US imposed sanctions on a
group of Venezuelan officials it accuses of human rights abuses.
As
part of the sanctions, Mr Obama issued an executive order declaring
Venezuela a threat to the national security of the United States.
President Maduro has collected more than 10 million signatures demanding its repeal.
Their
meeting at the summit, while less historic than the one between Mr
Castro and Mr Obama, is drawing as much attention for its
unpredictability.
Mr Maduro sent out mixed messages on Friday.
In a clear swipe at the US, he visited a monument to the victims of the 1989 US invasion of Panama just hours after he landed.
But he also said that it was "time nor for imperialism, but for peace".
"We're
in a battle of ideas, in a fight so that Venezuela is respected, we're
coming here in a constructive spirit, to make history through respect,"
he said.
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