Guyana_protestors_outside_veneuzela_embassy
Guyanese protesters outside the Thomas Street, Guyana Embassy of Venezuela in Guyana recently.
(Julia Johnson Image/Facebook)

By David Jessop

 News Americas, LONDON, England, Tues. June 23, 2015: Every time that CARICOM Heads of Government meet, they include language in their final communiqué on the Guyana-Venezuela border controversy. However, at their encounter next month in Barbados, the matter will no longer be about a dormant claim, but one that has come alive and is potentially dangerous.

The strength of their response will demonstrate whether CARICOM has the unity and willingness to address the significant questions that have been raised by the decision of an economic-ally and regional neighbor, to promulgate a decree law that, in part, claims the offshore territory of three CARICOM nations.

The background is that on May 27, Venezuela’s President, Nicolás Maduro, gazetted a decree which created for reasons of “territorial defense” an “Atlantic Coast of Venezuela.”

This new law contained co-ordinates and language that effectively claimed sovereignty over the offshore territorial waters of the Essequibo region of Guyana, and before the co-ordinates were amended about a week later, a small part of Suriname’s exclusive economic zone. It also claimed sovereignty over Bird Island, where Venezuela has built a naval base, but to which Dominica may still have a de jure, if not de facto maritime claim.

The context is that the decree is a part of a new military doctrine based on philosophical guidelines established by the late President, Hugo Chávez, and as such is intended to integrate a territorial system of defense management. In doing so, the six page decree, signed by 28 ministers, the Executive Vice President and the President, references existing delimitation agreements with Trinidad, the Netherlands, France, and the US in relation to Puerto Rico; includes Bird Island; and defines the maritime zone to the north of Bird Island as Venezuelan under existing delimitation agreements with the US and the Dominican Republic. This has the additional effect of extending Venezuela’s maritime and defense zone far out into the Caribbean Sea. The rest of the document is then about identifying national defense regions that are on Venezuela’s sovereign territory.

A map produced to coincide with the decree, indicates that Venezuela claims that all of the territorial waters within a 200 mile range are now so-called ‘Areas of Integral Defense of Marine Zones and Islands.’

Whether the decree was intended to escalate the border controversy is unclear. Just as uncertain is whether Venezuela notified Guyana in advance, although the nature of the language subsequently emanating from Georgetown would appear to suggest otherwise.

That said, President Granger’s tough response was hardly surprising coming against the background of having only just taken office, Venezuela’s objection to the concessions granted by Guyana to the US oil company, ExxonMobil, and that company’s announcement of what it described as a significant discovery of hydrocarbons at a location offshore Demerara, that is however sited in the Stabroek Block covered by Venezuela’s decree law.

Whatever the background, the issue has been escalating ever since, and while Dominica has said nothing, and Suriname may be compromised by whatever previously may have been agreed to by the Dutch government, Guyana has a strong case to argue that the decree’s content is illegal in international law, in addition to being a breach of the Geneva Agreement of 1966.

In a communiqué, the new Guyanese administration of President David Granger stressed that the country would seek to attract the world’s attention to the border controversy.

Responding, the Venezuelan President, Nicolás Maduro, stated that the language used in the communiqué by the Government of Guyana was “divorced from reality and over the line.”

“Whoever issued that communiqué made a serious diplomatic and political mistake, leading the President of Guyana to make mistakes,” President Maduro said.

Speaking on the state-run TV channel Venezolana de Television (VTV), he also said that Guyana’s communiqué was the “continuation” of a strategy to take over Venezuelan territory and had been developing for two years. He asserted the ExxonMobil was the mastermind behind the border controversy between Guyana and Venezuela, adding that the company was putting pressure on key officials to mount an international lobby against Venezuela.

The Venezuelan Minister of Foreign Affairs, Delcy Rodríguez, additionally described the communiqué issued by Guyana as “a dangerous provocation, [a] policy against the peaceful Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, supported by the power of US transnational company ExxonMobil, and such policy must be resisted,” she said.

Guyana’s new Foreign Minister, Carl Greenidge, subsequently confirmed that there are ongoing bilateral discussions with Venezuela and there was an invitation from UNASUR to mediate in the matter, but denounced in Parliament the Venezuelan decree as a “flagrant violation of international law” and rejected “this illegality which seeks to undermine our efforts at development through the exploitation of our natural resources offshore.”

Irrespective, the controversy is now likely to be even harder to resolve than before. The decree is a reflection of Venezuela’s military thinking at a time when its economy is in chaos, government rightly or wrongly feels subject to external threats, and paradoxically may find any challenge to its claims of sovereignty helpful as a nationally unifying diversion.

For CARICOM, the issue is diplomatically challenging. Twelve CARICOM nations benefit from extensive Venezuelan economic support under its PetroCaribe arrangement and seven are members of ALBA, the Bolivarian Alliance of the Americas, with Haiti as an observer.

Against this background, at issue will be the resolve of CARICOM members who rightly will wish to protect the national sovereignty of a member state, while recognizing the special relationship they have with Venezuela through their PetroCaribe membership, in some cases born out of economic necessity.

The observable measure of CARICOM’s resolve will be in the nature of the language contained in the final Barbados communiqué and its backing for the issue to be resolved as Guyana wishes, namely, through a judicial settlement process.

For its part, Venezuela has always opposed a judicial settlement, and is seeking to resuscitate the Good Offices process which came to an end with the death last year of Good Officer Norman Girvan.

Under the Geneva Agreement, the decision about which means to follow falls to the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, who coincidentally will be in Barbados to participate in the second day of the CARICOM summit on issues related to sustainable development.

David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council and can be contacted at david.jessop@caribbean-council.org. Previous columns can be found at www. caribbean-council.org.