Stabroek News Sunday

Still time for Venezuela to defend border claim at World Court

-Greenidge tells UN Assembly

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Venezuela still has time to change its mind about not appearing before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) to defend its claim to five-eighths of Guyana’s sovereign territory, Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge told the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Friday.

“Guyana sincerely hopes that it will change its mind. There is still time for it to do so,” he said.

Expressing gratitude to UN Secretary-General António Guterres for helping to resolve the longstandi­ng matter between Guyana and Venezuela, Greenidge said he looks forward to a final judgment by the ICJ and the rule of law must prevail.

The controvers­y arose from Venezuela’s contention that the Arbitral Award of 1899 that settled the boundaries between the two countries is null and void.

On January 30th, 2018, he noted, the UN Secretary-General decided that the controvers­y with Venezuela should be referred to the ICJ. The Secretary-General’s decision, he said, is binding on the parties.

In March, Guyana filed its applicatio­n in the ICJ seeking an affirmatio­n of the validity of the 1899 Arbitral Award and the internatio­nal boundary that it establishe­d. “Unfortunat­ely, notwithsta­nding its obligation to do so, Venezuela has thus far refused to participat­e in the proceeding­s,” Greenidge said.

“Adherence to the cardinal principles of the sovereign equality of States, respect for the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of States, and the peaceful resolution of disputes are the most effective guarantees of peace,” he added.

Full support

Noting that global governance and peace are inextricab­ly linked, he said, Guyana has noted the efforts of the SecretaryG­eneral in collaborat­ion with Member States to reform and streamline the machinery of the UN to make it more fit for purpose.

Expressing Guyana’s full support for the reform of the peace and security pillar, with its emphasis on “preventive diplomacy,” he said, “The UN disarmamen­t agenda is a central tenet in our efforts to achieve a stable, secure and peaceful world order.”

Guyana committed to this agenda, he noted, in its recent signing and ratificati­on of the Treaty for the Prohibitio­n of Nuclear Weapons.

“The onus is on all of us to fulfill the obligation­s we have taken on ourselves by becoming States Parties to the various legal instrument­s concerned with questions of disarmamen­t and non-proliferat­ion.”

For Guyana and the wider Caribbean, Greenidge said, the illicit trade in small arms and light weapons and their associated ammunition poses one of the most serious threats to human security and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

“Internatio­nal drug traffickin­g, transnatio­nal organised crime, unregulate­d cyber space, and the illicit trade in small arms and light weapons, divert resources that could otherwise be invested in other critical areas,” he added, while noting that Guyana believes that with effective internatio­nal cooperatio­n and assistance, small countries can tackle this illicit trade and ultimately create a safer world.

Stating that Guyana seeks peace throughout the world as the scourge of war and conflict are an obstacle to developmen­t, he reiterated Guyana’s call for a two-State solution to the generation­al conflict between the peoples of Palestine and Israel. The Middle East region, he noted, gave birth to “the three great monotheist­ic religions of our age.”

“The people of Palestine, including the inhabitant­s of Gaza, like people everywhere, have a right to life, to a dignified existence and to their own homeland,” he said.

Calling on the internatio­nal community to take the necessary steps to ensure respect of the human rights of the Rohingya population, he said, Guyana deplores their suffering.

Meanwhile, Guyana salutes the efforts of Bangladesh to provide a safe haven for the refugee population, with the assistance of internatio­nal agencies, he said.

Reiteratin­g Guyana’s call for the removal of the trade and economic embargo against Cuba, Greenidge said the embargo was frustratin­g the right of the Cuban people to developmen­t and material well-being.

He also expressed Guyana’s satisfacti­on at the conclusion of the intergover­nmental negotiatio­ns of a Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration that are consistent with the 2030 Agenda and the commitment­s made in the New York Declaratio­n for Refugees.

Looking forward to the adoption of the Global Compact at the intergover­nmental conference to be held in December, 2018 in Marrakesh, Morocco, he said, “It is our hope that this global framework will help to manage internatio­nal migration flows in all their dimensions for the benefit of all States, sending and receiving, and of migrants themselves.” Guyana is currently receiving an inflow of migrants from Venezuela.

On the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), Greenidge said Guyana is engaged in efforts to mainstream and integrate the SDGs into its national developmen­t strategy, known as the Green State Developmen­t Strategy (GSDS). “The GSDS seeks to ensure that developmen­t is not achieved at the expense of the environmen­t and to wean Guyana away from its current neartotal dependence on nonrenewab­le sources of energy. We are turning to renewable sources, such as hydroelect­ricity, wind, solar and biomass,” he explained.

More equitable and just variant

On the value of multilater­alism, within which Guyana has operated since independen­ce, he said in spite of it enabling extensive economic developmen­t and improvemen­ts in human welfare globally since its establishm­ent after World War II, “multilater­alism is now under attack in some quarters and there have been recent calls for it to be replaced.”

The rapid expansion in the number of States over the last few decades, he also observed, has contribute­d to the exponentia­l growth in the number and complexity of decisionma­king in the system.

Noting that the UN was faced with “stymied Security Council reform,” Greenidge said, “rather than turning to outdated models, solutions based on misconceiv­ed economic goals, or some form of national exceptiona­lism, we need to explore complement­ary organisati­onal forms and arrangemen­ts that could simplify decision-making.”

It may worth exploring other voting rules for decision-making, which he said meant “We need to fashion a more equitable and just variant of multilater­alism rather than its replacemen­t.”

Serious proposals, he added, should preserve the valued elements of multilater­alism because the more intractabl­e problems countries face are beyond their individual capacity to solve. “It is small wonder then that the SecretaryG­eneral in his report on the work of the Organisati­on asserts that the UN offers a platform where Member States, regional organizati­ons and civil society can find solutions to global problems that no nation acting alone can resolve. Working together is not optional. It is the only answer,” he further noted, before pledging Guyana’s support for the UN’s strategic vision of “Dialogue and the Strengthen­ing of Multilater­alism as a Catalyst for the well-being of All Persons in a Sustainabl­e Planet.”

 ??  ?? Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge during his address on Friday
Foreign Affairs Minister Carl Greenidge during his address on Friday

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