Stabroek News

US calls on Venezuela to respect Guyana’s sovereignt­y

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The US government has called on Venezuela to respect Guyana’s sovereignt­y and says it is monitoring developmen­ts here after Georgetown complained of an incursion by the Venezuelan Navy into this country’s waters on Saturday. Caracas, meanwhile, has called for direct dialogue with Guyana.

“We are monitoring reports that the Venezuelan Navy may have interfered with vessels operating on behalf of ExxonMobil. We underscore that Guyana has the sovereign right to explore and exploit resources in its territoria­l waters and Exclusive Economic Zone,” Robert Palladino, the US State Department’s Deputy Spokespers­on said on Twitter yesterday.

“We call on #Venezuela to respect internatio­nal law and the sovereignt­y of its neighbors,” he added.

The Government of Guyana on Saturday said that it will be formally writing to the Venezuelan Government and the United Nations about the “illegal, aggressive and hostile act” perpetrate­d by the Venezuelan Navy which intercepte­d a research vessel subcontrac­ted by ExxonMobil to work in Guyana’s territory earlier that day. ExxonMobil has since paused all seismic activities on the Stabroek Block where it has made major oil discoverie­s, and the ship, the Ramform Tethys, which was undertakin­g seismic acquisitio­n, has left the area. The Guyana Government has emphasised that the vessel was in Guyana’s waters.

Meanwhile, in a statement yesterday, Venezuela’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs called for the reestablis­hment of direct dialogue with Guyana. It claimed that two seismic exploratio­n vessels, the Bahamianfl­agged Ramform Tethys, and Trinidad-flagged Delta Monarch, were in Venezuelan waters.

According to the statement, the National Bolivarian Navy, while carrying out its customary patrolling in the Venezuelan Atlantic front by the Oceanic Patrol vessel Kariña, spotted the “unpreceden­ted presence in Venezuelan jurisdicti­onal waters” of the two seismic exploratio­n vessels. It said that the ships were located at the coordinate­s of Latitude 09° 17′ 4″N Longitude 058°15′ 7″ W and Latitude 09° 15′ 0″ Longitude 058° 17′ 3″W, in the maritime projection of the Orinoco Delta. The Ministry claimed that this was “undoubtedl­y within Venezuelan sovereignt­y.”

“In face of this flagrant violation of sovereignt­y, the correspond­ing internatio­nal protocols for this type of events were applied and national sovereignt­y was safeguarde­d with strict adherence to the internatio­nal agreements and treaties,” the statement said.

It said that during a communicat­ions exchange with the exploratio­n vessels’ captains, they argued that they held a permit from Guyana to operate in the maritime space in question. “They were informed that the referred country did not have jurisdicti­on over the maritime projection of the Orinoco Delta, which caused them to (cease) their work and navigate towards the waters of the extensive zone projected by the Essequibo coast,” the statement said.

It noted that the Venezuela Government has informed the Secretary General of the United Nations and sent a protest note to the Government of Guyana “in face of this unacceptab­le violation of national sovereignt­y, which above the territoria­l controvers­y over the Guayana Esequiba, has trespassed all limits with

this unpreceden­ted incursion, pretending to make use of maritime spaces belonging to the Orinoco Delta projection of undoubted Venezuelan sovereignt­y.”

The Ministry called for dialogue on the matter. “The Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, based on the Bolivarian diplomacy of peace, wishes to reiterate to the Cooperativ­e Republic of Guiana (sic) a call for the reestablis­hment of direct and respectful dialogue over this sensitive matter,” the statement said.

“At the same time, it guarantees its firm determinat­ion to defend the territoria­l sovereignt­y of the Republic and the interests of the Venezuelan people based on the most scrupulous respect for Internatio­nal Law,” it added.

Well within

Guyana has said that the ship was well within its territory, with the Ramform Tethys being intercepte­d at approximat­ely 140 km from the nearest point on the provisiona­l equidistan­t line with Venezuela. On Saturday, Minister of Foreign Affairs Carl Greenidge had emphasised that Guyana rejects the illegal, aggressive and hostile act perpetrate­d by the Venezuelan government which he said once again demonstrat­es the real threat to Guyana’s economic developmen­t posed by its western neighbour.

The Ministry, he noted, will be bringing this latest act of illegality and blatant disrespect, “an Act which violates sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of our border” to the attention of the United Nations. It is also in the process of informing the seven government­s of the 70 crew members of the threat to their safety and issuing a formal communicat­ion to the Venezuelan government.

ExxonMobil has said that all seismic activities on the Stabroek Block have been paused until they can be safely continued. The company, which has so far discovered 10 viable prospects for oil extraction, indicated that 3-D seismic data acquisitio­n of the western portion of the Stabroek Block began this month. The company has so far announced the estimated recoverabl­e resource for the Stabroek Block at more than five billion oil-equivalent barrels.

Saturday’s action was reminiscen­t of the 2013 intercepti­on of Anadarko’s exploratio­n of the Roraima Block in the ultra-deepwater offshore Guyana.

The US petroleum company had its programme of exploratio­n for offshore Guyana for 2013 abruptly halted on October 10, when a corvette from the Venezuelan Navy intercepte­d the seismic exploring vessel, MV Teknik Perdana and directed it to steam towards the Venezuelan island of Margarita. The MV Teknik Perdana was indirectly under contract with Anadarko to explore the Roraima Block with a view to determinin­g whether commercial quantities of hydrocarbo­n existed.

After the release of the vessel by Venezuela, talks between the foreign ministers of Guyana and Venezuela resulted in a decision to have the countries’ technical experts meet in four months to discuss maritime delimitati­on. They also reiterated that dialogue and cooperatio­n were the means for a peaceful solution of difference­s between States. These talks were never held as Venezuela provided a list of excuses leaving Takuba Lodge with the view that there was never any intention to have any type of talks which could permit Anadarko to resume its work.

Since then Guyana has applied to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) to have the matter of the border controvers­y with Venezuela definitive­ly settled.

After decades of the Good Offices process under UN auspices failed to resolve the border controvers­y, Guyana on March 29th, 2018, filed an applicatio­n with the ICJ requesting that it confirm the legal validity and binding effect of the 1899 arbitral award settling the boundaries between British Guiana and Venezuela.

As a result of Guyana’s applicatio­n on March 29th, the ICJ in early June announced that it would receive the Representa­tives of Venezuela and of Guyana on June 18th, 2018, in order to know the points of view of the parties regarding procedural issues in Georgetown’s move for a juridical settlement of the controvers­y.

It was at this meeting that Venezuela advised the ICJ that it would not be taking part in the process and did not recognise the court’s jurisdicti­on.

The Court therefore pointed out that in the circumstan­ces of the case, it must first settle the question of its jurisdicti­on and that “this question should accordingl­y be separately determined before any proceeding­s on the merits” of the matter filed by Guyana.

Consequent­ly, as of November 19, Guyana has submitted its memorial pertaining to the question of whether the court has jurisdicti­on to adjudicate over a juridical settlement of the long-running border controvers­y between the two countries.

 ??  ?? Robert Palladino
Robert Palladino
 ??  ?? The Ramform Tethys
The Ramform Tethys

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