2013-07-11 10:44:34shalulu25

Close allies and left-wing critics praise

Governments voiced a mix of outrage and concern Propecia, after the Brazilian daily O Globo, citing documents leaked by fugitive former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden,  said several nations were targets of US electronic surveillance .

The snooping included lifting data on leftist Venezuela's oil and military purchases and Mexico's drug war and energy sector as well as mapping the movements of a Marxist guerrilla group in Colombia, the newspaper said.

"It sends chills up my spine when we learn that they are spying on us through their intelligence services in Brazil," Argentine President Cristina Kirchner said, rreferring to another Globo report that the US maintained a satellite spy base in Brasilia at least until 2002.

Other countries targeted by the National Security Agency, albeit on a smaller scale, were Argentina, Ecuador, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Paraguay, Chile, Peru and El Salvador, O ip networking servicesGlobo said.

The issue will be on the agenda of Friday's summit of the Mercosur trade bloc, which includes Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Venezuela Best Restaurants in Hong Kong. The leaders of Bolivia and Honduras were also invited to the talks in Montevideo.

"The Mercosur meeting is an opportunity to take a common stand. Any attack on the sovereignty of one country must be answered with great firmness, because if we lower our heads, they will walk all over us," warned Brazil's presidential chief of staff Gilberto Carvalho.

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff has ordered an investigation into the report of electronic spying on its citizens and companies.

Colombia,he top US ally in the region which has received billions of dollars in US military aid to combat drug trafficking and the leftist rebels, voiced concern and said it would seek answers from the US.

A foreign ministry statement late Tuesday said that Colombia rejects aveeno baby hk"acts of espionage that violate people's right to privacy and international conventions on telecommunications."

The US ambassador to Colombia, Michael McKinley, label sticker said he understood "expressions of concern" and that the United States had an obligation to respond through diplomatic channels to its partners.

Another top ally, Mexico, said it had used "diplomatic channels" to demand "broad information" on the alleged spying.

A new spying allegation emerged Wednesday when the Mexican daily Excelsior reported that President Enrique Pena Nieto's predecessor had allowed the US to install a system to intercept phone calls and internet chatter.