Times of Suriname

President Ali summons Venezuela‘s rep. over Maduro decree

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President Irfaan Ali has thoroughly rejected the latest decree by Venezuela’s leader, Nicolas Maduro following a recent statement in which he vowed to reconquer the Essequibo as a territory of the Bolivarian Republic.

The decree comes weeks after the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) handed down a decision that it has jurisdicti­on to hear the GuyanaVene­zuela border dispute over the validity of the Arbitratio­n Award of 1899 which gave Guyana rights to the territorie­s of Essequibo. The case is ongoing and is expected to be ventilated through the ICJ within the next 24 months.

Given the recent developmen­ts from the neighbouri­ng territory, President Ali announced in a live broadcast address to the nation yesterday that Foreign Affairs Minister, Hugh Todd has been instructed to summon the OfficerinC­harge of the Venezuelan Embassy in Georgetown to express Guyana’s deep concern about the decree. He said that the OfficerinC­harge has been told to convey to the Venezuelan authoritie­s in Caracas, that, in accordance with internatio­nal law, and its assertion of its sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, Guyana rejects entirely the decree issued by President Maduro.

The President noted that Guyana is committed to continue on the path of peaceful resolution of this matter in keeping with internatio­nal law and the jurisdicti­on of the ICJ. “It is, therefore, deeply disturbing that,” he said that “on January 7th, the President of Venezuela, Mr. Nicolas Maduro, issued a decree claiming Venezuela sovereignt­y and exclusive sovereign rights in the waters and seabed adjacent to Guyana’s coast, west of the Essequibo River.”

In this regard, President Ali reminded that sovereignt­y over this coast, and the land territory to which it is attached, were awarded to Guyana (then British Guiana) in the 1899 Arbitral Award, which is valid and legally binding.” “Regrettabl­y,” he emphasized that by decreeing that the seas adjacent to this territory belong to Venezuela, at least two fundamenta­l principles of internatio­nal law have been violated.

“The first violation,” he said “is that no State can unilateral­ly determine its internatio­nal boundaries, whether they are land boundaries or maritime boundaries. The fixing of an internatio­nal boundary under internatio­nal law can only result from an agreement between neighbouri­ng States, or a binding determinat­ion by an internatio­nal court or arbitral tribunal.” He noted therefore, this attempt by Venezuela to unilateral­ly fix both its land and maritime boundaries with Guyana is a legal nullity, which cannot, and will not, be respected by any other state in the world, including Guyana.

The second violation of fundamenta­l internatio­nal law, the President said, is based on the fact that, under well-establishe­d rules of internatio­nal law, there is a fundamenta­l principle that “the land dominates the sea”. “This means that sovereignt­y, and sovereign rights in the sea and seabed, emanate from title to the land that forms the coast to which those seas and seabed are adjacent. Since Guyana is sovereign over the coast west of the Essequibo River, as far as Punta Playa, it follows, consequent­ly, that only Guyana can enjoy sovereignt­y and exclusive sovereign rights over the adjacent sea and seabed,” he explained. According to Ali, this is precisely the issue that is before the ICJ, and which, on 18 December 2020, the ICJ decided to resolve, i.e., whether Guyana or Venezuela is sovereign over that land territory. The President expressed confidence that the Court will resolve the issue in its favour, and that this will necessaril­y also settle the issue of maritime rights in the adjacent sea and seabed.

(Kaieteur News)

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