Venezuelan
President Nicholas Maduro refuses to back down from his country’s dangerous mission
to deny Guyana the right to exist as a sovereign state, by illegally claiming
two-thirds of Guyana’s territory, and Atlantic sea, as its own. It matters not how the chips fall,
but Maduro’s madness must be stopped by all means necessary.
Maduro
and his long line of predecessors’ illegal claim, although settled by adjudication in 1899 by a United Nations Tribunal, in favour of Guyana, would leave hundreds of thousands
of Guyanese, stateless, homeless, dispossessed, displaced and trapped forever
in a strange Spanish-speaking enclave, forever cut off from their family and friends, as
has happened on the Korean peninsula.
President Nicholas Maduro |
President
Maduro is apparently now suffering a psychotic meltdown by accusing little Guyana
of orchestrating a sophisticated covert international conspiracy with Western
governments, to create political instability within Venezuela.
It
is not surprising that President of Guyana David Granger and Charge d'Affaires of the United States
Embassy in Guyana, Bryan Hunt, both moved swiftly to dismiss President Maduro’s
outrageous claims that the two countries were colluding to destabilize Venezuela.
All Guyanese in the diaspora must add their voice to
the condemnation of Venezuela by reviving the ‘Not a Blade of Grass’ campaign. In
my opinion, instead of worrying about a 2 am. drinking curfew, people
should spend more time worrying about an annexation of Essequibo and its Atlantic
waters. Those who disagree with this view should begin learning Spanish from
now.
Breaking news out of Caracas over the weekend, indicates that Venezuela’s annexation
of Essequibo, an area of about 150,000 square kilometers, is imminent in the light
of Guyana’s recent discovery of significant oil deposits by ExxonMobil off-shore
its Atlantic Coast. This find resulted in President Maduro issuing two decrees giving his
military authority to operate in Guyana’s waters.
On
Friday, Venezuela’s dangerous war games with Guyana came to a head with
Caracas-based media outfit, El Universal quoting Retired colonel Pompeyo
Torrealba Rivero, Advisor to President Nicholas Nicolás Maduro on Essequibo, as
saying the government of Venezuela
proposes to:
- Issue
identity cards to the 200,000 estimated inhabitants of the Essequibo
- Launch
a diplomatic strategy to recover the territory of the Essequibo.
- Teach
the matter of the Essequibo as a subject in universities and elementary
and high schools.
- Initiate
an awareness campaign to make the population of Guyana understand that the
territory belongs to Venezuela.
- Set
up a presidential or diplomatic initiative addressing the matter of the
Essequibo.
- Contact the Secretary General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon, to urge him to advocate Venezuela's right over the territory of the Essequibo.
President David Granger |
Maduro
seems bent on committing criminal economic sabotage against Guyana by
threatening and actually using military force against foreign investors in
Guyana’s Essequibo region. Two cases in point are President Maduro’s October 2013 military eviction of U.S. seismic oil exploration vessel, RV Teknik Perdana, from Guyana’s
territorial waters and the proposed Dallas-based Beal Aerospace rocket launch
site in Essequibo. After intense pressure from Venezuela, Beal cancelled the
US$100M investment in 2000.
Despite
diplomatic rhetoric and assurances to Guyana, Maduro has long lost his
credibility as evidenced by his actions which counter everything that comes out
of his mouth regarding his baseless territorial claim to two-thirds of Guyana, and now a huge chunk of its territorial sea, land-locking the English-Speaking
nation of 750,000 people.
In
fact, Venezuela has ramped up its aggression against Guyana by recalling its
ambassador to Georgetown; refusing to renew a rice-for-oil deal with Guyana,
thus undermining the critical rice industry; reducing the personnel at the Venezuelan
embassy in Georgetown to a mere skeleton staff; directing its foreign minister
to review all diplomatic relations with Guyana; and giving its military generals
authority to conduct military exercises and manoeuvres in Guyana's territorial
waters.
The
road ahead will not be easy as Venezuela will use all the diplomatic and other
resources available to it to take the Essequibo region, but Guyana must also
continue to build a fortified global alliance not only by diplomatic rhetoric
by friendly countries, but by signing official communiques of support.
Venezuela is claiming the red part of the map of Guyana. |
Guyana
currently enjoys the support of CARICOM, the Commonwealth group of nations and
the United Kingdom. The United States has said that it is interested in a
peaceful resolution and supports Guyana’s desire to have the border controversy settled
judicially at the international level o nce and for all.
5 comments:
This is a very insightful article, Robert; well written and persuasive in its call to collective action by all Guyanese against the outrageous claim that Venezuela's president, Nicolás Maduro is making. The need for a widespread dissemination of information regarding the seriousness of Maduro's threat is urgent. I applaud your intiative in dedicating your blog and writing skills to this effect.
Thanks for keeping us in the loop!
Guyana does need to bring in outside forces to help protect its sovereignty. Venezuela has to stop the "eye pass" ...total disrespect of our people. Now, is the time for all Guyanese regardless of race or creed to unite, afterall everyone who was born there is a Guyanese. I say, Pres. Granger should temain resolute in his bid to take this case to the ICJ and not procrastinate on the issue. Well written Robert.
"Guyana does need to bring in outside forces to help protect its sovereignty.!" Really!!
Why then has this dispute not been settled in all this time?
The writer seems a touch myopic in his opinion! I would advise that without foreign intervention the madmen in power next door will someday soon be at the doorsteps with guns drawn evacuating Guyanese from their homes.
Must you wait until they march on you before you act!! Get your head out of the sand. You must expect the worst and defend against it!
Not sure what Perry Bond is trying to say. What dispute is he talking about? As far as international relations experts know, there is a controversy, not a dispute. Maybe he should download and read the 1899 tribunal ruling for himself and educate himself on international law. Nations are bound by the rulings of the arbitration tribunals, that is why it is a voluntary process. Just look at the recent ruling involving Guyana and Suriname. If Perry Bond understood international relations he would know that Venezuela's recent aggression is about balance of regional power and a clash of political ideologies. Guyana is just a pawn.
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