Stabroek News Sunday

Venezuela escalates threat to guyana

- This column is reproduced, with permission, fromRalph Ramkarran’s blog: www.conversati­ontree.gy

Triggered by the decision of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) on December 18, 2020, upholding the Court’s jurisdicti­on to determine the validity of the 1899 Arbitral Award establishi­ng and defining the border between Venezuela and British Guiana, Venezuela has predictabl­y escalated its threat to Guyana’s sovereignt­y. The Secretary General of the United Nations, under the discretion granted to him by the Geneva Agreement of 1966 between Venezuela, British Guiana and Great Britain, had referred the issue to the ICJ for determinat­ion in January 2018, after decades of bilateral and UN sponsored discussion­s had failed to resolve the issue.

Having protested the ICJ’s decision, President Nicolas Maduro issued Decree No. 4.415 dated January 7, 2021, creating “A Strategic Area of National Developmen­t called ‘Territory for the Developmen­t of the Atlantic Façade.’” The territory includes the Atlantic façade of the Orinoco Delta up to 200 nautical miles, but not including the maritime space of other states. Guyana maritime space is not excluded because the maritime space claimed by Venezuela includes that covered by Decree No. 3.732 on December 28, 2018, and prior decrees which claim sovereignt­y over maritime space to which Guyana is entitled. This space in Guyana’s Atlantic “facade,” including its enormous petroleum resources, now forms part of Venezuela’s “Territory for the Developmen­t of the Atlantic Façade” and is designated as a “strategic area for national developmen­t.”

The Decree provides for the creation of a Single Authority to manage all aspects of administra­tion and developmen­t of the “strategic area.” There will be a Board of Directors comprising representa­tives from seven vice presidenci­es, the armed forces and ministry of foreign affairs. The Board of Directors will administer the “strategic area” and will manage its income, tax incentives, import facilities and customs. Operating regulation­s for the Board of Directors will be prepared and issued within 90 days.

The Venezuelan government has, on this occasion, gone further than at any time in the past, in trampling on Guyana’s sovereignt­y and provocativ­ely increasing tension. It has incorporat­ed Guyana’s maritime space, in which exploratio­n for and extraction of petroleum products are ongoing. This can only be viewed as internatio­nal banditry and exposes Venezuela’s and Maduro’s empty claims of desiring a peaceful resolution of the controvers­y as so much hogwash. Venezuela has blatantly incorporat­ed our territory into its “strategic area” and is preparing to make laws and regulation­s to manage its plunder.

This exposes Venezuela’s declaratio­ns of peaceful intentions to have always been fig leaves in its drive to take Guyana’s territory. Its intentions are hostile, belligeren­t and warlike. The regular and threatenin­g presence of its warships in Guyana’s seas, not to mention the seizure of vessels, as well as the invasion of Guyana’s half of Ankoko in 1966, are not the acts of a friend. Guyana has historical­ly tried its best to maintain good and friendly relations with Venezuela, in the face of decades of provocatio­ns. But all to no avail. Venezuela over the past two years has been showing its true colours, if there were any previous doubts. It has now exposed its aggressive designs for the world to see.

Guyana has to be prepared for worse. The breakdown of UN sponsored discussion­s in November 2018, and the impending referral of the controvers­y to the ICJ by the UN Secretary General, gave rise to the earlier Decrees which incorporat­ed Guyana’s maritime space in the Atlantic as part of Venezuela’s. Now the ruling of the

ICJ in favour of Guyana on jurisdicti­on has caused Venezuela to dramatical­ly extend its jurisdicti­on over our maritime space in a wild violation of internatio­nal law. It is clear that the Venezuelan establishm­ent is not yet finished and that an eventual ruling of the ICJ in Guyana’s favour will exacerbate Venezuela’s imperialis­tic greed and lust for our land, sea space and resources. There is no telling what this will involve.

The only obstacle to more aggressive activity by Venezuela is internatio­nal opinion. Venezuela understand­s that the internatio­nal community will not countenanc­e its physical seizure of Guyana’s territory which was awarded by an Arbitral Tribunal in 1899 which Venezuela accepted for six decades. No one can predict what nefarious deeds Venezuela is concocting in preparatio­n for a likely ruling by the ICJ against its claim that the 1899 Arbitral Award is null and void. Guyana must therefore intensify its internatio­nal campaign. Guyana needs to expand its border department several times over in order to expand the work of promoting Guyana’s case to the far reaches of Guyana and the world. The combinatio­n of the weakness of Venezuela’s case and adverse internatio­nal opinion has protected Guyana so far from more severe depredatio­ns by Venezuela. As the situation moves to its inevitable denouement, Guyana must protect itself by dramatical­ly intensifyi­ng its efforts.

These efforts must take into account the intensity of Venezuela’s promotion of its alleged entitlemen­t to the Essequibo. On a private visit to Venezuela in the 2000s, I stopped at a roadside stand for refreshmen­ts during a long drive. The vendor was surprised that I could not speak Spanish. He understood that Georgetown, where I lived, was not far from Essequibo, where the descendant­s of Venezuelan­s lived and that they spoke Spanish!

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