Stabroek News

Guyana has failed to employ an effective campaign to pressure the UN SecretaryG­eneral into making a decision on the Venezuela controvers­y

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Dear Editor,

“Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Kimoon, on Saturday declared “I have to make an assessment by November” on the way forward with regard to the Venezuela border controvers­y with Guyana. This quote is taken from an article in last Sunday’s edition of Kaieteur News which had as its headline ‘Guyana/Venezuela Controvers­y-Decision in November, UN Chief.’

I am a bit confused by that headline since the Secretary-General (SG) said, “I have to make an assessment”. He did not say a decision. If an assessment on the way forward is in fact, or turns out to be a decision to, or not to refer this matter to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, then the Secretary-General would have fulfilled his responsibi­lity. However, as I indicated in an earlier letter I don’t expect the SG to rule on this matter prior to leaving office in December. So what will it mean for Guyana if there is no clear decision by the current SG?

Before I attempt an answer to my own question I should point out that based on an English translatio­n of the speech by Venezuela at the recent UN General

Assembly, I see no reference in that speech to the controvers­y with Guyana. The omission of any reference to the controvers­y in the Venezuelan UN speech must be examined from a public communicat­ion/public diplomacy perspectiv­e as Guyana seeks to have this matter solved via judicial settlement. The absence of reference to the controvers­y must be seen as a strategy on the part of Venezuela to give the SG some comfort. It sends a signal to the internatio­nal community that one of the parties to the controvers­y, and in this case the “aggrieved” party, is in no hurry to have the SG act and that it is quite “reasonable” for him to have this issue passed on to his successor.

Guyana has been pushing through various channels in as dignified and diplomatic­ally correct a way as possible to have Ban Ki-moon make a decision before leaving office, utilizing bilateral and multilater­al meetings, speeches, etc. However, in my view (and I have expressed this view many times in the past) our failure has been in employing an effective public diplomacy/outreach campaign designed to “pressure” the SG into making a decision. To use Guyanese parlance “boat gone a falls” in terms of using such a strategy to have Ban Ki-moon make a decision before he leaves office. But we must embark now on this public diplomacy campaign so that his successor will be “obliged” to recognize that while Venezuela might not be urging resolution of its own claim, and while the internatio­nal community may not be crying out for an end to this controvers­y, public opinion wants a resolution of this controvers­y, so that a small, developing country could push ahead uninhibite­d with its developmen­t plans including oil production in the area claimed by Venezuela.

To be able to have public opinion demonstrat­e its desire for the resolution of this matter and to influence a new SG accordingl­y, we need to have influentia­l media in small and big countries devote attention to this issue, ultimately having editorials and columns written in favour of this matter being referred urgently to the internatio­nal court; having reputable electronic media including radio and television air news and opinion pieces with documentar­y evidence as to how this controvers­y is thwarting investment in Guyana and negatively impacting our economic developmen­t; having internatio­nal human rights, religious, indigenous peoples and other relevant organizati­ons issue statements pointing to the need for resolution of the issue so that the people of Guyana, especially the poor, could aspire to a better quality of life.

If we are really serious about having a judicial settlement of the Venezuela claim, and I have no doubt we are, we should embark on such a campaign now as a matter of urgent national importance so as to have this referral to the world court early in the new SG’s tenure. It must be made to become an important issue on his/her agenda on the assumption of office.

And if, God forbid, a man becomes the next president of the United States, who knows what support Maduro might get from a like-minded incompeten­t, and how he might be emboldened if not empowered to act in violation of internatio­nal law. This is no joke.

Yours faithfully, Wesley Kirton

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