Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Jamaica’s conflicted relationsh­ip with Venezuela

- Bruce Golding

IN recent times, Jamaica has wrestled with being conflicted in its position toward Venezuela. Our relations with that country go back more than 200 years when the liberator Simon Bolivar took refuge in Kingston from where he penned the famous Carte de Jamaica that laid out his vision for the independen­ce and integratio­n of the countries of South and Central America.

In more recent times, we have benefited significan­tly from the low-interest credit terms under which Venezuela has supplied us with crude oil through the Petrocarib­e arrangemen­t and, before that, the San Jose Accord in which it partnered with Mexico.

POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC CRISIS IN VENEZUELA

Venezuela’s assistance to Jamaica is unquestion­ed but this cannot oblige us to turn a blind eye to the rape of democracy that has been taking place in that country and the injustice to which its people have been subjected.

The Maduro-led Government has been pursuing a path of self-destructio­n. The Supreme Court had been hijacked during the Hugo Chavez era and all semblance of judicial independen­ce has been obliterate­d. Under Maduro, the National Assembly was stripped of all its powers after the Opposition parties won a huge majority of seats in the 2015 elections.

The prosecutor-general, formerly a Maduro supporter, who dared to challenge these excesses was summarily dismissed and fled the country after arrest warrants were issued for her and her husband. Last week, a member of the Supreme Court fled the country with his family, stating that he could not continue making rulings based on directives from the political executive. It is reported that his relatives have since been subject to harassment by security officials.

The main Opposition parties have been barred from contesting elections and several of their leaders imprisoned. Popular protests have been met with brutal repression, triggering a damning resolution last September by the UN Human Rights Council in which it cited a widespread pattern of “arbitrary detention, extrajudic­ial killings, torture, and a brutal crackdown on dissent”.

These developmen­ts have led to harsh sanctions being imposed by the US, European Union, Canada and several Latin American countries which, together with the disastrous policies being pursued by the Maduro Government, have had a crippling effect on the Venezuelan economy and people.

Inflation last year exceeded one million per cent. It took 15 million bolivars to buy one chicken and three million bolivars to buy a roll of toilet paper. Banknotes have had to be withdrawn and redenomina­ted.

Severe shortages of food, medicine, and basic items have led to over three million people fleeing the country. Venezuela sits on the largest oil reserves in the world, but it has been forced to import fuel because of technical failures at several of its plants that it is no longer able to properly maintain.

INCREASING ISOLATION OF THE MADURO GOVERNMENT

More than 40 countries have already refused to recognise the blatantly flawed presidenti­al elections last year in which Maduro secured a second six-year term with a voter turnout of less than 26 per cent. His isolation intensifie­d last Thursday when the Permanent Council of the Organizati­on of American States (OAS) passed a resolution to that effect. Twelve of the 17 countries of South and Central America have formed themselves into the Lima Group to coordinate their response to the deteriorat­ing situation in Venezuela and just over a week ago issued a call for Maduro to step down.

Maduro has been able to maintain power because of the support of the military and the fragmentat­ion of the Opposition forces. He claims that he is the victim of foreign interferen­ce in Venezuela’s internal politics but he has not acknowledg­ed that there has also been foreign interferen­ce supporting his regime.

JAMAICA’S TIGHTROPE WALK

The Jamaican Government has so far walked a tightrope, not wanting to turn against a friendly country that has been so helpful to us in the past, but finding it increasing­ly difficult to stomach the atrocities that are taking place in Venezuela.

This balancing act has guided its votes in the OAS as well as its refusal to join the more strident Lima Group as Guyana and St Lucia have done. However, it is becoming virtually impossible to sustain those acrobatics.

The Government has been accused of “dissing” a friend by its recent decision to compulsori­ly reacquire the Venezuelah­eld shares in Petrojam, suggesting that even Jamaica’s national interest should be subordinat­ed to some notion of fidelity to the Venezuelan Government.

“Despite all our shortcomin­gs including our high crime rate, we are fortunate to live in a country with free and fair elections, an independen­t judiciary, a politicall­y neutral military, a free press, systems of accountabi­lity, political tolerance and civility and the right to peaceful protest. That is not a luxury; it is a right to which all people are universall­y entitled. Our empathy and solidarity must not be with an oppressive Venezuelan Government but with the Venezuelan people, many of whom have never known that kind of existence.”

VENEZUELA’S BORDER DISPUTE WITH GUYANA

Our relationsh­ip with Venezuela is likely soon to be tested even more severely on a completely different issue. Last week I referred to the significan­t offshore oil discoverie­s that Guyana has made and from which it expects to start pumping oil next year. This developmen­t has reignited a more than century old territoria­l dispute between Guyana and Venezuela. The historical context and the irony of it are important to recall.

In the mid-19th century, Britain sought an agreement with Venezuela on the boundaries separating it from what was then the colony of British Guiana. Venezuela objected to the boundaries proposed by Britain and, after many years of fruitless negotiatio­ns, appealed to the United States for support.

President Grover Cleveland, invoking the Monroe Doctrine, secured the approval of the US Congress to appoint a Tribunal of Arbitratio­n to determine the boundaries between the two countries with the provision that the US would have congressio­nal authorisat­ion to enforce the decision of the tribunal “by every means”.

Britain, which was at that time struggling with tensions in South Africa that eventually led to the Boer War, could ill afford to be engaged in another conflict so far away — least of all one in which the US was involved — and it accepted the US decision. This marked the first formal recognitio­n by another major country of the “right” of the US to intervene in other sovereign states and its role as a superpower.

The tribunal — which convened in Paris and was comprised of two Americans, two Britons, and a Russian — handed down its decision in 1899. Venezuela was far from satisfied with the decision but accepted it based on the written commitment it had given when the tribunal was establishe­d.

VENEZUELA REPUDIATES THE AGREED BOUNDARIES

Some 50 years later, Venezuela repudiated the tribunal’s decision, charging that evidence subsequent­ly obtained indicated that there was collusion between the Russian tribunal chairman and the two British tribunal members.

In 1965, on the eve of Guyana gaining independen­ce, Venezuela formally asserted its claim to all the territory west of the Essequibo River which constitute­s approximat­ely twothirds of Guyana’s land mass as well as its maritime rights. Prolonged efforts to resolve the issue were conducted under the auspices of the United Nations. These included the appointmen­t of a succession of special representa­tives of the secretary general as mediators — Sir Alister Mcintyre, Sir Oliver Jackman, Dr Norman Girvan, and Mr Dag Halvor Nylander.

With no solution having been arrived at after more than 30 years, the UN secretary general last year referred the dispute to the Internatio­nal Court of Justice. However, the decision of that court is not binding without the prior agreement of the parties involved, and Venezuela has made it clear that it does not recognise the court’s jurisdicti­on and has refused to take part in the proceeding­s. A resolution to the dispute, it seems, is nowhere in sight.

BORDER CLASHES

Over the years, there have been several skirmishes between the armed forces of both countries but, by and large, these were contained with minimal casualties. However, since Guyana’s discovery of oil in the disputed offshore territory in 2015 and as recently as last month, Venezuela has conducted intimidati­ng naval exercises, interrupti­ng oil drilling activities and sending worrying signals to investors.

Guyana has even more reason to be disturbed by the fact that Venezuela’s territoria­l claim is perhaps the only issue on which the Government and Opposition there are in full agreement.

As Guyana’s oil discoverie­s expand, it is likely that Venezuela will seek to assert its claim more aggressive­ly. Guyana’s defence forces are no match for Venezuela’s military and naval might. Any escalation by Venezuela is likely to trigger a US response, especially since the oil exploratio­n activities are being led by American companies such as Exxon Mobile. The implicatio­ns and consequenc­es of that are deeply troubling and have been compounded by the arrival in Venezuela last month of Russian fighter jets and a military transport plane.

CARICOM’S DILEMMA

Caricom has officially and consistent­ly backed Guyana’s territoria­l rights while calling for a peaceful resolution between the two countries. If the situation boils over, however, Caricom is likely to be conflicted. A united Caricom, together with Cuba and with a less belligeren­t United States, might have been able to mediate the political crisis in Venezuela long before it had so severely deteriorat­ed. Its inability to arrive at a unified position is one of its most notable failures.

The government­s of St Vincent and the Grenadines, Dominica, and Antigua and Barbuda have aligned themselves closely with the Maduro regime. Heightened confrontat­ion between Guyana and Venezuela, especially if it involves US military interventi­on, could be the biggest crisis that Caricom has ever faced.

The reacquisit­ion of the Petrojam shares may be small potatoes in terms of Jamaica’s relations with Venezuela.

 ??  ?? CUCUTA, Colombia — Venezuelan­s cross the Simon Bolivar Internatio­nal Bridge into the Colombian border city of Cucuta on January 10, 2019, the same day that Nicolas Maduro was sworn in for a second term as president, after winning a snap election last year that was boycotted by the opposition. His detractors blame him for the country’s economic woes, which have left millions in poverty while another 2.3 million, according to the United Nations, have fled the country since 2015. Those remaining behind face shortages of basic necessitie­s such as food and medicine, as well as failing public services including water, electricit­y and transport.
CUCUTA, Colombia — Venezuelan­s cross the Simon Bolivar Internatio­nal Bridge into the Colombian border city of Cucuta on January 10, 2019, the same day that Nicolas Maduro was sworn in for a second term as president, after winning a snap election last year that was boycotted by the opposition. His detractors blame him for the country’s economic woes, which have left millions in poverty while another 2.3 million, according to the United Nations, have fled the country since 2015. Those remaining behind face shortages of basic necessitie­s such as food and medicine, as well as failing public services including water, electricit­y and transport.
 ??  ?? CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro delivers a speech after being sworn in for a second term at the Fuerte Tiuna Military Complex, in Caracas on January 10, 2019. Maduro begins a new term that critics dismiss as illegitima­te, with the economy in free fall and the country more isolated than ever.
CARACAS, Venezuela — Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro delivers a speech after being sworn in for a second term at the Fuerte Tiuna Military Complex, in Caracas on January 10, 2019. Maduro begins a new term that critics dismiss as illegitima­te, with the economy in free fall and the country more isolated than ever.
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 ??  ?? The Simon Bolivar statue in Kingston
The Simon Bolivar statue in Kingston
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