Regional leaders arriving in St Vincent ahead of Guyana-Venezuela talks
KINGSTOWN, St Vincent, CMC – Prime Minister of St Vincent Dr Ralph Gonsalves says several CARICOM leaders are due there later on Wednesday ahead of the talks between Presidents Irfaan Ali and Nicolas Maduro regarding the long-standing border dispute between Guyana and Venezuela.
Gonsalves, who is hosting the meeting, told a news conference that apart from the CARICOM chairman and Dominica's Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit, Kingstown is expecting the leaders of St Lucia, Grenada, and the Bahamas to be present.
“I think I owe it to the people of St Vincent and the Grenadines and the region to see where we are with the arrangements,” Gonsalves told reporters, adding that the Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley and his Barbados counterpart, Mia Mottley will be arriving on Thursday morning.
“Presidents Ali and Maduro are coming in tomorrow morning. And this evening, I expect the personal envoy of President Lula of the Federal Republic of Brazil, a very experienced diplomat,” Gonsalves said, noting that the Brazilian official, Celso Amorim, had served 10 years as a foreign minister and five years as minister of defence.
Prime Minister Gonsalves said that two diplomats from the United Nations Secretary General's office will be arriving on Wednesday night as “my friend (UN Secretary General) Antonio Gutierrez couldn't make it”
Gonsalves said that a contingent of Venezuelans has already arrived “ as you would expect that the security arrangements” and that an advanced party from Guyana is due here later on Wednesday.
Gonsalves said that the preparations for the meeting on Thursday, are also serving as a dress rehearsal for early next year, when St Vincent and the Grenadines will host the summit of The Community of States of Latin America and the Caribbean (CELAC) “when St Vincent and Grenadines passes over the pro tempore presidency to the President of Honduras”.
The meeting in St Vincent is being held under the auspices of CELAC and CARICOM and Gonsalves insisted that St Vincent and the Grenadines is “facilitating” and not going to act as a “mediator” during the talks.
But he told reporters that “of course as an interlocutor, what I want to assist is a resolution of matters consequential to the border dispute. And you notice the formulation: matters consequential to the border dispute. It is carefully phrased. And you've been hearing me talking about that.
“And Irfan Ali has staked out the position of Guyana publicly, Nicolas Maduro has staked out the position of Venezuela publicly. And to some people, the divide is so wide that they may not be able to be any resolution.
“Well, there is value in talking without prejudice, towards Guyanese going before the International Court of Justice, and what Venezuela wants to pursue through the 1966 agreement. But we see what they have staked out as their various positions, I don't have to go over those here. They're fairly well canvassed.”
Last Sunday, Venezuela staged a referendum in which it said 95 per cent of the votes cast were in support of the annexation of the Essequibo region and President Maduro announced soon afterwards that foreign companies working in Essequibo would have to withdraw within three months.
He said he was also proposing a special law to prohibit all companies that work under Guyana concessions from any transaction and that Caracas would be creating a military unit for the disputed territory but that it would be based in a neighbouring Venezuelan state.
Prior to the referendum, the ICJ had ruled that Venezuela must not take any action to seize Essequibo, which has been administered by Guyana for more than a century.
The Essequibo makes up about two-thirds of Guyanese territory and is home to 125,000 of the country's 800,000 citizens, but is also claimed by Venezuela.
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