Stabroek News Sunday

The Guyana-Venezuela controvers­y heads for the world court

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By Article IV(1) of the Geneva Agreement of 1966, the Government­s of Guyana and Venezuela committed to choosing one of the means of peaceful settlement provided for by Article 33 of the Charter of the United Nations (UN), if the Mixed Commission did not arrive at a full agreement for the settlement of the controvers­y within four years. Judicial settlement was one of those means under Article 33. But the part of the article providing for the parties to choose the means of settlement is qualified by Article V. It provides that they are to refer the decision of the means of settlement to an “appropriat­e internatio­nal organ on which they both agree,” but failing agreement “to the Secretary General of the United Nations.”

After the conclusion of the mandate of the Mixed Commission, the Government­s of Guyana, Venezuela and the United Kingdom entered into an agreement known as the Port of Spain Protocol in June, 1970, which suspended the operation of Article IV of the Geneva Agreement for twelve years. This meant effectivel­y that the formal search under Article IV for a resolution of the controvers­y was suspended for the period. Guyana and Venezuela undertook to “explore all possibilit­ies of better understand­ing between them.”

The Protocol of Port of Spain came to an end in 1982 and was not renewed. The parties then agreed to refer the matter to the Secretary General of the United Nations who selected the Good Officer process under Article 33 of the United Nations Charter. He appointed then Vice Chancellor of the University of the West Indies, Sir Alister McIntyre, as the first of three Good Officers. Dr Barton Scotland, the current Speaker of the

INational Assembly, was the first Guyana Facilitato­r and discussion­s started around 1990. I replaced Dr Scotland in about 1994 and despite some fifteen years of discussion­s, no progress was made towards a solution. Even though the controvers­y was based on Venezuela’s contention that the Arbitral Award was “null and void,” its discourse always focused, not on what grounds the Arbitral Award should be set aside, but on acquiring a part of Guyana’s territory. t eventually became clear to Guyana after fifty years of effort that the controvers­y could not be resolved by discussion and negotiatio­n. A reference of the matter to the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists, the World Court, appeared to be the only solution. Guyana prevailed upon the UN Secretary General to do so, as Venezuela would never have agreed. The UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon, agreed, but with a proviso that an enhanced Good Officer Process should continue for another year and that he would only refer the matter if there was no significan­t progress. The Good Officer Process did not produce significan­t progress and so the UN Secretary General referred the matter to the ICJ or World Court.

The Venezuelan Government has rejected the reference of the controvers­y to the ICJ on the ground that political negotiatio­n under the Geneva Agreement is the only path to reach a peaceful, practical and satisfacto­ry solution to the controvers­y. This interpreta­tion ignores the fact that a means of settlement under Article 33 of the UN Charter which the UN Secretary General empowered to select under Article 1V(2) of the Geneva Agreement is “judicial settlement,” as stated above. A reference of the controvers­y to the ICJ is seeking a “judicial settlement.” But Guyana has grown accustomed to the weirdly partisan and blatantly incorrect interpreta­tions of the Geneva Agreement by the Venezuelan­s who, for example, have consistent­ly argued that Article V, which in fact preserves the status quo, awards the area of their claim west of the Essequibo River to them.

The Geneva Agreement, and the main issue over which the ICJ will have jurisdicti­on, is the validity of the Arbitral Award of 1899. It will not directly involve ownership of the territory. This is what Article 1 says: “A Mixed Commission shall be establishe­d with the task of seeking satisfacto­ry solutions for the practical settlement of the controvers­y between Venezuela and the United Kingdom which has arisen as a result of the Venezuelan contention that the Arbitral Award of 1899 between British Guiana and Venezuela is null and void.”

Venezuela’s contention that the Arbitral Award is null and void is based on a claim a junior lawyer representi­ng Venezuela at the hearing of the Arbitral Tribunal,

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