Stabroek News

French senators urge deeper France relations with Guyana, setting up of embassy

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Two French senators who visited in January this year have called on Paris to establish an embassy here on account of Guyana’s growing economic importance and common security interests in the face of threats from Venezuela.

Writing in the February 17th edition of French weekly newspaper, Le Journal du Dimanche, François Bonneau, senator from Charente, and Philippe Folliot, senator from Tarn also argued for an embassy on the grounds that Guyanese have to travel to the Dutch embassy in Suriname for a Schengen visa and this limits opportunit­ies for the growth in business ties.

In their capacity as parliament­arians on the Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee, they travelled to Mabaruma, the capital of Region One then journeyed three kilometres from the border with Venezuela to the villages of Yaraquita and White Water. They noted that they were the first foreign MPs to have visited the area following Venezuela’s December 3rd 2023 referendum seeking to annexe Guyana’s county of Essequibo.

Noting Guyana’s significan­t oil deposits which should this year place it 6th among the richest countries in the world, the senators said this makes it a “prey” for Venezuela under Nicolas Maduro through its claim to Essequibo despite the 1899 arbitral award. France, they said, cannot remain indifferen­t to the Venezuelan threat.

The senators wrote that Guyana, through the Essequibo region, will in the coming years be at the centre of major economic, geostrateg­ic, social and environmen­tal issues. They noted that a large part of Guyana’s territory is carpeted by the Amazonian forest and due to its proximity to French Guiana, France must strengthen its presence in this country and make it a major partner on all these levels.

During a first trip to Guyana last April and during their trip at the beginning of the year, they said that Guyanese authoritie­s told them of their expectatio­ns of support, as well as of their desire to see French investment­s develop in their territory. The senators pointed out that a few French companies are already present, like the Amcar company in the north west, specializi­ng in heart of palm, a major employer in the region and which supports 400 Amerindian families.

They asserted that Guyana’s growth will generate increasing demand in terms of infrastruc­ture, energy production and supply, real estate, agricultur­e and agroforest­ry, mineral prospectin­g - sectors in which French companies are underrepre­sented even though they possess undeniable know-how. The senators asserted that it is therefore time for France to make known the opportunit­ies offered by Guyana to its companies and for these companies to seize them as soon as possible.

Furthermor­e, as a military partner for many years and a permanent member of the UN Security Council, the senators added that France cannot remain indifferen­t to the Venezuelan threat. They said that Paris must remind Venezuela of fundamenta­l principles such as respect for territoria­l integrity and internatio­nal law.

However, to strengthen ties with Guyana and facilitate, establishm­ent of French companies and to provide the means to defend in the event of a Venezuelan intrusion, the senators said that a key piece is missing namely an embassy in Georgetown.

France, they said, must focus more on its presence in Guyana, and act as a conscious neighbour. Since Brexit, they pointed out that no European Union country is represente­d in Guyana at the Embassy level. France is also the only permanent member of the

UN Security Council not to have an embassy there.

The senators said that they are convinced that France must focus more on its presence in Guyana and act as a neighbour aware of the issues specific to this region. It must assume its role as a historic geographic partner with the countries of the Guiana Plateau, as well as its responsibi­lity as a major player in the management of internatio­nal relations. Guyana, they said, is in demand and its economic future will transform it completely, when, at the same time, its geostrateg­ic future is shrouded in uncertaint­y.

They said it is up to Paris to respond to this challenge by establishi­ng full diplomatic relations with Guyana which will be the guarantee of its commitment and credibilit­y as a partner.

Last July, France said that it was upping its presence here with the establishm­ent of a bureau from September 2023. This was announced by French Ambassador to Suriname and Guyana, Nicholas de Lacoste. He made the announceme­nt during the Bastille Day celebratio­ns at the Georgetown Club. He

explained that the office will be manned by a French career diplomat to represent the interests of France as that country increases its presence here. “It is not an embassy but we will have a permanent diplomatic presence here in Georgetown”, he said.

Asked about the possibilit­y of the establishm­ent of a French embassy here, de Lacoste responded that it is not impossible \Ian Griffith appeared on Wednesday before Magistrate Zamilla Ally-Seepaul at the Leonora Magistrate’s Court where he was sentenced to three years and one month imprisonme­nt and fined $3,495,000 for traffickin­g cocaine.

Griffith was found guilty of the offence of traffickin­g in 2.330 kgs of cocaine, the Customs Anti-Narcotic Unit said yesterday.

On March 3rd 2022, Griffith was arrested and subsequent­ly charged after being found with the cocaine during an operation conducted on the East Bank Essequibo.

but it will be dependent on the number of French nationals and French enterprise­s here, and the developmen­t of French culture.

“We take into considerat­ion all these parameters and if we see that the time is right for a fullfledge­d embassy we will do so. For now, this diplomatic bureau will be linked with the French Embassy in Paramaribo,” he further explained.

Man gets three years, one month over cocaine on East Bank Essequibo

 ?? ?? The French senators who visited in January this year are seen here in the Amazon Caribbean (AmCar) heart of palm factory situated on the Barima River
The French senators who visited in January this year are seen here in the Amazon Caribbean (AmCar) heart of palm factory situated on the Barima River
 ?? ?? Ian Griffith
Ian Griffith

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