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Brazilian
President Dilma Rousseff attends a meeting in Brasilia on
September 17, 2013
(AFP, Evaristo Sa)
|
BRASILIA,
Brazil — Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff postponed a state visit to
Washington on Tuesday in protest over allegations of US cyberspying on her
country.
Rousseff
announced the decision after discussing the espionage row with US President
Barack Obama Monday in a telephone call.
"The
two presidents decided to postpone the state visit since the outcome of this
visit should not be conditioned on an issue which for Brazil has not been
satisfactorily resolved," Rousseff's office said.
The visit
had been scheduled for October 23 but no new date was immediately announced.
The
statement reflected Brasilia's anger over disclosures that the US National
Security Agency (NSA) spied on her email communications and on the state-run
energy giant Petrobras.
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Barack
Obama (L) greets President Dilma
Rousseff at the G20 summit on September 6,
2013 in Saint Petersburg (AFP/File,
Jewel Samad)
|
Brasilia
had slammed the alleged spying as "unacceptable."
In
Washington, White House spokesman Jay Carney, said: "I think it's because
the relationship is so important and because it has so many facets that the
president agrees with this decision they made together to postpone the
visit."
"They
both look forward to that visit which will celebrate our broad relationship and
the president believes and their president believes as I understand it should
not be overshadowed by a bilateral issue no matter how important or challenging
the issue may be," he added.
Carney said
Obama understood the Brazilian leader's concerns and "looks forward to
welcoming President Rousseff to Washington at a date to be mutually
agreed."
He called
Obama's invitation to Rousseff a "reflection of the importance he places
on this growing global partnership and the close bonds between the American and
Brazilian people."
"Other
important cooperation mechanisms, including the presidential dialogues on
political, economic, energy, and defense cooperation, will continue," he
said.
Brazil had
demanded an investigation, explanations and a US commitment to stop such
spying.
The
Brazilian government expressed confidence that once the spying issue is
satisfactorily resolved," the state visit will take place as soon as
possible."
In July,
the daily Globo, citing documents provided by fugitive US intelligence leaker
Edward Snowden, reported that Washington eavesdropped on Brazilians' phone
calls and Internet communications.
The report
said Washington maintained an intelligence base in Brasilia, part of a network
of 16 such stations operated by the NSA around the world to intercept foreign
satellite transmissions.
Brazilian
Communication Paulo Bernardo then dismissed claims by US officials that the NSA
was only collecting metadata -- logs of phone numbers called and the duration
of such calls -- and not listening in on calls.
Washington's
biggest electronic spy agency, he said, is conducting a "much deeper
surveillance."
Snowden, a
former NSA contractor, is now a fugitive in Russia, living under temporary
asylum after fleeing US justice.
He is
wanted by Washington on espionage charges linked to media disclosures about US
surveillance programs.
Rousseff is
meanwhile to address the UN General Assembly session in New York later this
month and her aides said she will raise the US spying issue.
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