Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.N. Security Council looks at Guyana-Venezuela dispute

- EDITH M. LEDERER

UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations Security Council took no immediate action at a closed emergency meeting late Friday requested by Guyana after Venezuela’s referendum claiming the vast oil- and mineral-rich Essequibo region that makes up a large part of its neighbor.

But diplomats said the widespread view of the 15 council members was that the internatio­nal law must be respected, including the U.N. Charter’s requiremen­t that all member nations respect the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of every other nation — and for the parties to respect the Internatio­nal Court of Justice’s orders and its role as an arbiter.

A possible news release was circulated to council members and some said they needed to check with capitals, the diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the consultati­ons were private.

At the start of Friday’s meeting, the diplomats said, U.N. political chief Rosemary DiCarlo briefed the council on the dispute.

In a letter to the Security Council president requesting the emergency meeting, Guyana Foreign Minister Hugh Hilton Todd accused Venezuela of violating the U.N. Charter by attempting to take its territory.

The letter recounted the arbitratio­n between then-British Guiana and Venezuela in 1899 and the formal demarcatio­n of their border in a 1905 agreement. For over 60 years, he said, Venezuela accepted the boundary, but in 1962 it challenged the 1899 arbitratio­n that set the border.

The diplomatic fight over the Essequibo region has flared since then, but it intensifie­d in 2015 after ExxonMobil announced it had found vast amounts of oil off its coast.

The dispute escalated as Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro held a referendum Dec. 3 in which Venezuelan­s approved his claim of sovereignt­y over Essequibo. Venezuelan voters were asked whether they support establishi­ng a state in the disputed territory, known as Essequibo, granting citizenshi­p to current and future area residents and rejecting the jurisdicti­on of the United Nations’ top court in settling the disagreeme­nt between the South American countries. Maduro has since ordered Venezuela’s stateowned companies to immediatel­y begin exploratio­n in the disputed region.

The 61,600-square-mile area accounts for two-thirds of Guyana. But Venezuela, which has the world’s largest proven oil reserves, has always considered Essequibo as its own because the region was within its boundaries during the Spanish colonial period.

In an Associated Press interview Wednesday, Guyana’s President Irfaan Ali accused Venezuela of defying a Dec. 1 ruling by the Internatio­nal Court of Justice in the Netherland­s.

It ordered Venezuela not to take any action until the court rules on the countries’ competing claims, a process expected to take years.

Venezuela’s government condemned Ali’s statement, accusing Guyana of acting irresponsi­bly and alleging it has given the U.S. military’s Southern Command a green light to enter Essequibo.

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