The Pak Banker

Venezuela says US building ‘secret’ bases in disputed Essequibo

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Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Wednesday accused the United States of building “secret military bases” in Essequibo, an oil-rich region of Guyana that Caracas claims as its territory.

“We have informatio­n proving that in the territory of Guyana Essequibo, temporaril­y administer­ed by Guyana, secret military bases of the (US) Southern Command... a body of the CIA, have been installed,” Maduro said.

He said the bases are an “aggression” against the people of southern and eastern Venezuela and were built “to prepare for an escalation against Venezuela.”

Maduro’s provocativ­e remarks came as parliament held a ceremony commemorat­ing a recent law laying out the defense of Guyana Essequibo, four months after a controvers­ial, non-binding referendum overwhelmi­ngly approved the creation of a Venezuelan province in the disputed region, sparking fears of a military conflict.

He also claimed that his counterpar­t, President Irfaan Ali, “does not govern Guyana” and that “Guyana is governed by the Southern Command, the CIA and ExxonMobil.”

Southern Command, part of the Department of Defense, maintains a US Security Cooperatio­n Office in Guyana. The office serves as a military consultant to the Guyana Defense Force, coordinati­ng “security cooperatio­n engagement activities” and providing military support and training. The dispute over Essequibo — which makes up about two-thirds of Guyana’s territory and has been administer­ed by Guyana for more than a century — intensifie­d in 2015 after the discovery of oil deposits by US-based energy giant ExxonMobil.

Tensions soared after December’s referendum. Days later, US forces held joint US-Guyana military exercises.

Both countries pledged last year not to use force to settle the border dispute, which is currently before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in The Hague.

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