Venezuela Is Suddenly Intent on Annexing Two-Thirds Guyana

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#1 Venezuela Is Suddenly Intent on Annexing Two-Thirds Guyana

Post by frigidmagi »

Vice
Venezuela has fallen on hard times, as its economy collapses amid a crippling shortage of goods and the world's highest inflation rate. In what may seem a sign of increasing desperation, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has revived a territorial dispute with neighboring Guyana over a stretch of territory that makes up approximately two-thirds of the tiny South American country.

A long-simmering disagreement over the Essequibo region, as the territory is known, has lain dormant for more than 15 years, Maduro appears to have been prompted to extend his country's claim after the discovery of a potentially rich oil deposit in the area.

In 1899, Guyana won possession of the 95,000 thousand miles of territory in an arbitration court ruling while it was still a British colony known as British Guiana. Venezuela contested this decision in 1962, and four years later a treaty was signed by Great Britain, Venezuela, and British Guiana on the understanding that the parties work toward a peaceful resolution to the disagreement. Guyana won independence just months later.

Venezuela's government recently sent a letter revisiting this issue to ExxonMobil, which Guyana has contracted to undertake offshore drilling in the area — and which reported making a significant oil discovery in May. Maduro's critics have decried the revival of the territorial claim as a farce that is meant to distract Venezuelans from their country's economic crisis while shoring up flagging support for the embattled president.

Henrique Capriles, governor of Miranda state and former opposition presidential candidate, questioned whether Maduro actually has a real interest in recovering the Essequibo, suggesting that it was merely a stunt for improving Maduro's popularity rating, which recently fell to a near-record low of 25 in May.

"They are stepping away from the idea of Hugo Chavez," Sadio Garavini, who served as Venezuelan ambassador in Guyana between 1980 and 1984, told VICE News. "Maduro said practically nothing about the subject while serving for years as Chavez's foreign minister."

Related: A Condom Shortage Is Altering Young People's Sex Lives in Venezuela

According to Emilio Figueredo, Venezuela's former UN ambassador for the implementation of the Geneva treaty, the letter should have been addressed to the Guyanese government rather than the oil company.
"This is a new way in which the Venezuelan government is looking for the famous foreign enemy," Figueredo told VICE News. "First they tried with Obama, then with Spain. Since they've yielded no results, now they're trying with Guyana's president."
Maduro issued a decree in early June claiming sovereignty over the area and has asked United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to reinitiate arbitration while vowing to Venezuelans that he will win control over the Essequibo.

Guyana has responded by withdrawing from the UN-backed settlement framework.

"We have said to the UN secretary-general very clearly that the good offices process, which we have faithfully followed, does not seem to offer any solution to go ahead," Guyanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Carl Greenidge remarked in a press conference on Monday.

The threat to Guyana's territorial integrity, Greenidge suggested, should be settled at the International Court of Justice.
Venezuela has meanwhile formed an Office for the Rescue of the Essequibo led by a retired army colonel, which plans to charm Guyanese who are living in the disputed territory with a marketing blitz that will also involve sending them hundreds of thousands of Venezuelan identification cards.
Anything to distract people from the lack of toilet paper I guess.
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#2 Re: Venezuela Is Suddenly Intent on Annexing Two-Thirds Guya

Post by Lys »

Eh, while it's true that Maduro is just doing this for show, there really isn't any suddenly about it. Remember how i grew up in Venezuela? Well every map made in the country has Esequibo painted in pinstripes with the words "Claimed Zone" on them. The matter has flared up every so often over the years, with little in the way of resolution. Much of the claim was actually pretty legit back in the day, whereas the rest was always overreaching. Things might have perhaps been resolved on that basis except for, well, the British Fucking Empire, which went and colluded with the supposedly neutral arbitrator to get what they wanted. Even in that it wasn't terrible, as the Venezuelans still got what the British thought was generous, which is more than others who had to deal with John Bull can say. Nonetheless the Brits more or less got away with a naked landgrab. Venezuela might have perhaps pulled some kind of save by parking settlers in the disputed area and using that as a basis for a further claim, but they didn't, so tough shit. In the modern day the whole of Guyana Esequiba has been officially Guyanese for over a century, there are Guyanese people living there, and Guyanese laws and culture hold sway. Venezuela no longer has any legitimacy whatsoever there.
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