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Mercosur leaders push for a regional security architecture against organized crime
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Mercosur leaders push for a regional security architecture against organized crime

MercoPress · Jul 1, 2026, 8:28 AM · Also reported by 1 other source

Key takeaways

  • The issue ran through the addresses of the bloc's presidents and those of its associated states, at a summit where Paraguay handed over the pro tempore presidency to Uruguay.
  • Chile's President Jos Antonio Kast agreed on the need for a joint response.
  • Uruguay's President Yamand Orsi, who assumed the bloc's rotating presidency, included security among his term's priorities.

Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.

The fight against transnational organized crime emerged as one of the central themes of Mercosur's 68th summit of heads of state, held on Tuesday in the Paraguayan city of Luque, where several leaders called for building a regional security architecture with concrete goals and deadlines. The issue ran through the addresses of the bloc's presidents and those of its associated states, at a summit where Paraguay handed over the pro tempore presidency to Uruguay.

Bolivia's President Rodrigo Paz called for building a new South American architecture of cooperation on security, strategic intelligence and democratic defense, holding that no country will be able to face the challenges of the 21st century alone in that area. Paz warned about organized crime and drug trafficking, which, he said, operate without borders and in many cases infiltrated into political systems, and said Bolivia aspires to become the great bridge of continental integration.

Chile's President Jos Antonio Kast agreed on the need for a joint response. There is no possible integration when the routes we want to open to trade are already open to organized crime, he said, proposing that the bloc and its partners build a security architecture with clear goals and deadlines addressing integrated border management, the pursuit of illicit financial flows, the control of arms trafficking and intelligence sharing between prosecutors and police. Along similar lines, Ecuador's President Daniel Noboa said regional integration is more urgent than ever in the face of transnational crime that does not respect sovereignties, and said his country confronts organized crime with all the force of the State, in a war that no country can or should fight alone.

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