Bangkok Post

Caracas urges UN to stop US, allies from using force

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UNITED NATIONS: Venezuela is asking the UN Security Council to affirm that the United States and 10 other countries have no authority to use force against the South American nation by invoking the Inter-American Reciprocal Assistance Treaty.

Venezuela’s UN ambassador, Samuel Moncada, claimed in a letter to the council circulated on Wednesday that the 1947 treaty is being used “as a tool” to implement the naval blockade threatened by President Donald Trump on Aug 1.

He pointed to a decision on Sept 11 by 11 countries in the Americas — Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, United States, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Paraguay and the Dominican Republic — to convene a treaty meeting on grounds that the current situation in Venezuela has a “destabilis­ing impact” and poses a “threat to peace and security in the hemisphere”.

Mr Moncada said there is no regional threat from Venezuela. He said the real aim of the US and other countries in threatenin­g the use of force is to overthrow the legitimate constituti­onal government of President Nicolas Maduro. The United States and about 50 other countries recognise National Assembly speaker Juan Guaido as Venezuela’s president.

Mr Moncada said the provisions of the inter-American treaty, which Venezuela pulled out of in 2013, state that the UN Charter takes precedence and that the use or threat of force must be authorised by the Security Council.

“The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela has shown itself to be a lover and guarantor of peace,” he said. “Therefore, we are warning against the aggression being planned, in violation of the Charter of the United Nations and to the detriment of the powers and responsibi­lities of the Security Council.”

“For this reason, we call on the Security Council to affirm its authority in the case of the illegal manipulati­on of the Inter-American Treaty of Reciprocal Assistance as an excuse to use force against Venezuela, when our country is not even a party to that treaty,” Mr Moncada said.

He said the Security Council should also “acknowledg­e publicly that Venezuela poses no threat to internatio­nal peace and security”.

In a reference to the US, Mr Moncada said that resolving disputes through military action only benefits the most powerful country in the continent, which historical­ly has used force against its neighbours.

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