Times of Suriname

Guyana, Venez. begin legal battle over ICJ’s jurisdicti­on

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Guyana, as scheduled, on Monday submitted to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) its Memorial on Jurisdicti­on in the case brought against the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela to confirm, in a final and binding judgment, the full legal validity of the arbitral award that establishe­d the internatio­nal boundary between Guyana and Venezuela more than a century ago.

According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Guyana filed its Memorial in accordance with the Order of the Court dated 19 June, 2018 that determined it would first resolve the question of the Court’s jurisdicti­on in light of Venezuela’s refusal to participat­e in the proceeding­s based on its claim that the Court lacks jurisdicti­on.

“Guyana’s Memorial shows there is no foundation to Venezuela’s contention that the means of settlement listed in Article 33 of the UN Charter must be selected by the Secretary-General successive­ly, such that the means listed ahead of judicial settlement have to be exhausted before recourse to the Court can be chosen,” the Ministry said.

According to Guyana’s contention, nothing in the text of Article IV of the Geneva Agreement, which provides a menu of options, not a predetermi­ned sequence, supports Venezuela’s interpreta­tion. Guyana denied Venezuela’s claims that that the controvers­y must be settled by friendly talks.

“Nor is Venezuela correct in arguing that, as it has recently asserted, the controvers­y must be resolved exclusivel­y by friendly negotiatio­ns, a claim that is belied by the express terms of the Geneva Agreement and contempora­neous statements by the parties during its negotiatio­n and ratificati­on.” Guyana said that it has prepared its Memorial bearing in mind, the ICJ’s instructio­n that it should be informed of all the legal and factual grounds on which the parties rely in the matter of its jurisdicti­on.

According to the Ministry, Guyana’s submission accordingl­y sets out how the boundary with Venezuela was establishe­d by an arbitral tribunal constitute­d pursuant to a treaty concluded by Venezuela and Great Britain in 1897.

“Venezuela accepted this unanimous award, which was rendered by five eminent jurists on 3 October 1899, celebrated its outcome, participat­ed in a joint commission to demarcate the boundary on the ground, and insisted on the award’s strict implementa­tion.

“Only decades later did Venezuela, in anticipati­on of Guyana’s independen­ce, cease recognizin­g the award’s validity and binding nature, using that pretext to lay claim to more than twothirds of Guyana’s territory.” The ministry reminded that to ensure a final resolution to the controvers­y through peaceful means, the Government of British Guiana, Venezuela and the United Kingdom concluded the Geneva Agreement on 17 February 1966.

(Kaieteur News)

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