Jamaica Gleaner

Stay out of Venezuela’s internal affairs, Antigua PM urges CARICOM

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PRIME MINISTER Gaston Browne is advising his Caribbean Community (CARICOM) colleagues to stay out of the internal affairs of Venezuela, where opposition forces have been staging street demonstrat­ions over the past months in a bid to force President Nicolás Maduro out of office.

Last month, CARICOM foreign ministers called for noninterfe­rence in the internal affairs of Venezuela, where several people have been killed in street demonstrat­ions.

“In so far as intervenin­g in the affairs of any state, we are against that. We have taken that position at the OAS (Organizati­on of American States) and we have stood by that principle. We have stood by the principle of noninterfe­rence, we have stood by the principle of respecting the sovereignt­y and independen­ce of states,” Browne said in an interview broadcast on the stateowned ABS television.

He told viewers that his administra­tion was “concerned about the situation in Venezuela,” adding “clearly the situation is getting more and more intense but ultimately it has to be resolved by the Venezuelan people”.

HIGHEST IDEALS

Earlier this month, St Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves praised CARICOM countries for acting “with independen­ce, courage and concerted action” during the OAS Permanent Council meeting called to discuss the situation in Venezuela.

In a two-page letter sent to Irwin La Rocque, the CARICOM secretary general, Prime Minister Gonsalves said that the “CARICOM stance was a tribute to our region’s commitment to the highest ideals of our Caribbean civilisati­on and of its institutio­nal expression, politicall­y, the independen­t and sovereign nation-state”.

In his letter, which was copied to heads of state and government­s in CARICOM, and obtained by the Caribbean Media Corporatio­n, Gonsalves said he was “humbled and proud of the majesty of CARICOM’s united stance in defence of the principle of non-interferen­ce in the internal affairs of states; the bedrock ideas of sovereignt­y and independen­ce, (and) the nobility of the fundamenta­l precepts of representa­tive democracy”.

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