True to its property of timeliness, this morning the brand new president of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff, came to the meeting he had with Prince Philip at 9.30, a quarter of an hour before finding the door of the palace cars of the two leaders . The encounter with the Prince was the first private meeting with a foreign leader.
Should have been the second, after Hugo Chavez, Venezuela's president, who left yesterday without waiting for an appointment and without explanation. The conversation between Prince Dilma and lasted 40 minutes in which the interpreter had little work because both are understood in almost everything.
Both recalled that Spanish companies are already very present and active in Brazil in sectors such as telecommunications, banking and energy. The president encouraged the Prince to Spain to collaborate even more in a country like Brazil "in full swing." Dilma specifically cited two moments that Brazil is going to live in their infrastructure development: the 2014 World Cup and the Olympics in Rio in 2016, the occasion when Spanish companies to invest more in the country.
Prince pleased the commitment of the new president in promoting the growth of the country that can give more strength every day for Spanish companies, and left very satisfied with the promise of Dilma further boost the study of Spanish in Brazil to convert Portuguese to Spanish bilingual country.
Today in Brazil there is already a law requiring public schools to offer students who wish to study Spanish, but in practice the law is little operational due to lack of teachers and resources. Dilma wants to untie the knot so that the law can be fully effective. In terms of international cooperation, the president reminded the Prínicpe Rousseff both countries already work together in some places like Haiti and asked for that in other areas, especially in Latin America and Africa, Brazil and Spain " can go hand in hand.
" The Prince invited on behalf of the Spanish authorities and King Juan Carlos to Rousseff to officially visit to Spain when she sees fit. Dilma, I noted in his diary and she is a political and management to "consult your calendar every day and do not forget the promises," said one of his advisers.
Should have been the second, after Hugo Chavez, Venezuela's president, who left yesterday without waiting for an appointment and without explanation. The conversation between Prince Dilma and lasted 40 minutes in which the interpreter had little work because both are understood in almost everything.
Both recalled that Spanish companies are already very present and active in Brazil in sectors such as telecommunications, banking and energy. The president encouraged the Prince to Spain to collaborate even more in a country like Brazil "in full swing." Dilma specifically cited two moments that Brazil is going to live in their infrastructure development: the 2014 World Cup and the Olympics in Rio in 2016, the occasion when Spanish companies to invest more in the country.
Prince pleased the commitment of the new president in promoting the growth of the country that can give more strength every day for Spanish companies, and left very satisfied with the promise of Dilma further boost the study of Spanish in Brazil to convert Portuguese to Spanish bilingual country.
Today in Brazil there is already a law requiring public schools to offer students who wish to study Spanish, but in practice the law is little operational due to lack of teachers and resources. Dilma wants to untie the knot so that the law can be fully effective. In terms of international cooperation, the president reminded the Prínicpe Rousseff both countries already work together in some places like Haiti and asked for that in other areas, especially in Latin America and Africa, Brazil and Spain " can go hand in hand.
" The Prince invited on behalf of the Spanish authorities and King Juan Carlos to Rousseff to officially visit to Spain when she sees fit. Dilma, I noted in his diary and she is a political and management to "consult your calendar every day and do not forget the promises," said one of his advisers.
- Brazil's Dilma Rousseff (01/01/2011)
- Brazil's new president (02/01/2011)
- Brazil Hands Power To First Female President (01/01/2011)
- Rousseff becomes first woman to lead Brazil (01/01/2011)
- Rousseff sworn in as Brazil's new president (01/01/2011)
Dilma Rousseff (homepage)  Dilma Rousseff (wikipedia)  Brazil (geolocation)  Brazil (wikipedia)  
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