Stabroek News

Guyana team for Antigua talks on Venezuela border controvers­y

-as deadline for ICJ move looms

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A Guyana team will be heading to Antigua within a few days to once again meet with United Nations (UN) representa­tive Dag Nylander to discuss the Venezuela border controvers­y as an end-of-year deadline for substantia­l progress on the matter approaches.

Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge is optimistic that Nylander will complete his work and that UN Secretary General, Antonio Guterres will stand by a commitment he made that he will decide by December 31st on the matter being taken to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ).

On December 16, 2016, in a much-anticipate­d decision, Guterres’ predecesso­r, Ban Ki-moon decided that the Good Offices process on the decades-old border controvers­y would be given one more year and if by the end of 2017 “significan­t progress” was not made, the case would move to the ICJ.

Despite several rounds of meetings between the two sides, it doesn’t appear as if substantia­l progress has been made on resolving the controvers­y.

Guyana’s team for Antigua is made up largely of legal minds who specialize in internatio­nal law, Greenidge related yesterday during his budget debate speech in Parliament.

“So that process we will finish soon. The representa­tive of the UN secretary general has subsequent to the November 10th (2017) deadline of his own mandate… asked us to have another meeting. And in the meeting that should take place in Antigua in a day or two, we will be meeting with the representa­tive again… I assume at a more informal level,” Greenidge related.

And while Venezuela President Nicolas Maduro is expected to be in Antigua at the same time, it is unclear if a representa­tive from his country would also be at the meeting.

In October the foreign ministers of Guyana and Venezuela met in New York and had discussion­s facilitate­d by Nylander, Personal Representa­tive of the UN Secretary-General organized within the framework of the Good Offices mandate.

“We are looking at a process at some point to resolve the question of the validity of the actual award. I mean sometimes in the public you get the impression that a decision is being made as to where the border lies. The actual award is ultimately about the borders but it is really a decision of whether the court somehow, in making this decision, had acted inappropri­ately or in a manner that was in keeping with the law,” Greenidge told the House.

Greenidge related that the UN had earlier decided that teams from Venezuela and Guyana would be required to travel to engage in consultati­ons. Even as he acknowledg­ed the costliness of the exercise, however, Greenidge shared the view that resources need to be invested to protect territory.

It is to this end that he defended the budget sums on travel spent by his ministry saying that much of it was necessary to facilitate the work needed to deal with the issue.

“…when you look at the budget and you see money spent to travel, it is my view… that you cannot afford to be penny-pinching or say that you cannot afford to defend the territory. You have to be able to find the resources to do this work and we have tried to do that,” he said.

He noted that the teams involved in the consultati­ons have included members of civil society, as well as government and opposition members, and commended the opposition PPP/C for the support they have lent on border and territoria­l integrity matters.

“…we are happy I think,

to be able to say that we had all the support we have requested, all that we could have expected from the opposite benches. I think we should congratula­te ourselves on that,” he stated, opining that the “other side” has not been able to represent their own interests in the same way.

The Minister of Foreign Affairs pointed to the importance of a holistic and inclusive support system for the country when dealing with matters of territoria­l integrity.

He explained the importance of a unified front to the global community and pointed out the battering this country has been taking from especially Latin American countries who seemed to have been constant ears to Venezuela’s narrative on the controvers­y.

This, he said, was affecting the country’s internatio­nal investment negatively and that Guyana’s citizenry have to understand that “perception and consistenc­y of policies matter.”

It is on this point that he condemned attacks that have been made by internatio­nal and local press against the government here and investors.

“One of the things that is clearly of concern to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs during the course of the last year is this— that we have seen in the internatio­nal press—especially in the Latin American press—a series of attacks, both against the government and people on one hand and on some of the investors that have been involved in Guyana,” he stated, noting that some of these articles have been regurgitat­ed in the local press.

The Minister called on all persons to help lay a case for this country as the matter concerning the border was settled since 1899 but that Venezuela wants to change the narrative on the issue to suit its purpose.

Over the last few years, Guyana has argued for a juridical settlement of the controvers­y, contending that decades of the Good Officer process have resulted in no progress but has allowed Venezuela to interfere with Guyana’s developmen­t. Venezuela on the other hand has been pressing for a continuati­on of the Good Officer process.

 ??  ?? Dag Nylander
Dag Nylander
 ??  ?? Carl Greenidge
Carl Greenidge

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