Stabroek News Sunday

Guyana found itself in the anti-Maduro camp at the Barbados meeting

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Dear Editor, Long before the just concluded meeting of Caricom Foreign Ministers in Barbados there must have been intense lobbying by some large and influentia­l member states of the OAS in the capitals of Caricom member states, including Georgetown.

The intense lobbying had to do with the situation in Venezuela and the move by some member states of the OAS to expel Venezuela from the hemispheri­c body and to support a resolution calling for regime change in Guyana’s western neighbour.

Not since the mid-1960s was a member state expelled from the OAS.

It was in preparatio­n for an OAS Ministeria­l meeting in Washington and later, the OAS General Assembly(GA) slated for Cancun, Mexico that Caricom foreign ministers met to coordinate foreign policy positions on a number of matters including the question of Venezuela.

At the Barbados meeting, Caricom’s greatest collective strength, its multilater­alism, failed once again to reach consensus on the question of Venezuela due to a host of conflictin­g endogenous and exogenous factors.

Guyana, Jamaica, St Lucia and the Bahamas were unsupporti­ve of a call to support the Government of Venezuela and to take a united stand against outside interferen­ce in Venezuela’s internal affairs.

By teaming up with Jamaica, St Lucia and the Bahamas, the Government of Guyana demonstrat­ed where it stood ideologica­lly. Its balancing act no doubt, was strongly influenced by geostrateg­ic considerat­ions, the politics of the border controvers­y with Venezuela and the new exogenous ExxonMobil factor.

As a warning shot to Caricom and the OAS indicating where it stood on the matter, the US government announced targeted sanctions against a battery of Venezuelan judges who were responsibl­e for the passage of a law suspending the Venezuelan parliament. Their US visas were revoked and their bank accounts in the US were frozen, notwithsta­nding the fact that the law suspending the parliament was revoked just days after it came into effect.

The current OAS General Secretary, instead of playing the role of a consensus builder within the hemispheri­c body, went into overdrive openly demonstrat­ing a bellicose and hostile attitude towards Venezuela, a diplomatic phenomenon unheard of since the 1960s insofar as OAS relations with sovereign and independen­t member states is concerned.

The OAS General Secretary’s position, along with that of a coalition of antiMaduro member states, have contribute­d in no small way to the lack of unity and solidarity among OAS members, resulting in the emergence of uncalled for pro and anti-Venezuela sentiments within the hemispheri­c body. Diplomacy it seemed, was inclined to give way to heavy verbal artillery across borders reminiscen­t of the Cold War era.

And Guyana, by playing the old Burnham-style foreign policy balancing act found itself objectivel­y in the antiMaduro camp from fear of being perceived by the US as being leftist and prosociali­st. Their game plan was to damage the PPP/C by casting it in that mode in the eyes of the ABC countries and the rest of the internatio­nal community.

Yours faithfully, Clement J Rohee Former Minister of Foreign Affairs

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