用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Venezuela’s threats to annex most of Guyana draw international concern
2023-12-11 00:00:00.0     华盛顿邮报-世界     原网页

       

       Listen 4 min

       Share

       Comment on this story Comment 333

       Add to your saved stories

       Save

       It might be only a political stunt by an unpopular leader trying to win reelection. But threats by Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro to annex nearly three-quarters of oil-rich Guyana are drawing international concern.

       Wp Get the full experience.Choose your plan ArrowRight

       In a television appearance this week, Maduro presented a map that showed Guyana’s 61,000-square-mile Esequibo region as part of Venezuela. The authoritarian socialist told a crowd of government officials and supporters that he would create the Venezuelan state Guyana Esequiba, grant Venezuelan citizenship to its Guyanese residents, license the state oil company PDVSA and state metal conglomerate CVG to search it for oil and order energy companies currently there, including Houston-based ExxonMobil, to leave in three months.

       “The world has to know — the Republic of Guyana has to know,” he said, “the Esequibo is ours.”

       Venezuela claims nearly three-quarters of Guyana. Guyana wants help.

       The reaction has been swift. Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula de Silva offered Thursday to mediate between the South American neighbors. The U.N. Security Council scheduled a closed-door meeting on the matter for Friday. The U.S. Embassy in Guyana announced joint flight operations Thursday by the Guyana Defense Force and U.S. Southern Command.

       Advertisement

       Story continues below advertisement

       Venezuela has long claimed the Esequibo, a sparsely populated region of forest, swamp and scrubland. It’s a rare point of agreement in the deeply divided country; generations of schoolchildren have been raised on maps like the one Maduro wielded during his address Tuesday.

       Atlantic

       Ocean

       Caribbean

       Sea

       El Esequibo

       Caracas

       TRINIDAD &

       TOBAGO

       Guyanese territory

       claimed by Venezuela

       VENEZUELA

       Georgetown

       GUYANA

       Bogotá

       FRENCH

       GUIANA

       SURINAME

       (FRA.)

       COLOMBIA

       Boa

       Vista

       Macapá

       Equator

       BRAZIL

       Belém

       Manaus

       PERU

       300 MILES

       Caribbean Sea

       Atlantic Ocean

       El Esequibo

       Guyanese territory

       claimed by Venezuela

       Caracas

       FRENCH

       GUIANA

       VENEZUELA

       Georgetown

       (FRANCE)

       GUYANA

       SURINAME

       COLOMBIA

       Boa

       Vista

       Macapá

       Equator

       BRAZIL

       Manaus

       PERU

       300 MILES

       Caribbean Sea

       Atlantic Ocean

       El Esequibo

       Guyanese

       territory

       claimed by

       Venezuela

       Caracas

       VENEZUELA

       Georgetown

       GUYANA

       Bogotá

       COLOMBIA

       Boa

       Vista

       FRENCH

       GUIANA

       SURINAME

       Equator

       (FRANCE)

       BRAZIL

       PERU

       Manaus

       300 MILES

       Guyana has repeatedly rejected those claims, saying an 1899 international arbitration resolved the dispute. Venezuela has challenged the validity of that ruling. Its objections have intensified since ExxonMobil discovered massive reserves of oil in the ocean floor off the territory in 2015, a windfall that has turned Guyana, previously one of the hemisphere’s poorest countries, into one of the world’s fastest-growing economies.

       The International Court of Justice — to which the United Nations, at Guyana’s urging, has referred the matter — urged both sides last week to refrain from “any action which might aggravate or extend the dispute.”

       Maduro’s bluster seems unlikely to escalate to action. He and several members of his inner circle are under federal criminal indictment in the United States on charges of narcoterrorism. The once-booming oil industry — the country is home to the world’s largest proven reserves — has been crippled by outdated infrastructure, chronic mismanagement and U.S. sanctions.

       Advertisement

       Story continues below advertisement

       Amid an economic collapse, Maduro has worked to improve relations with Washington. The Biden administration agreed in October to ease some restrictions on Venezuela’s oil sector in exchange for Maduro’s pledge to hold freer elections next year — a breakthrough between the two countries, which severed diplomatic relations in 2019.

       U.S. to ease sanctions on Venezuela for freer presidential election next year

       But his remarks on Esequibo have unsettled Guyana and drawn warnings from the United States and Brazil.

       Share this article Share

       Guyanese President Irfaan Ali told CNN this week that Maduro’s declaration was a “desperate attempt by Venezuela to seize” his country’s territories. “We are taking every precautionary measure,” he said, including appeals to the United States, Brazil and the United Nations for diplomatic and military support to deter a Venezuelan invasion.

       Story continues below advertisement

       The State Department confirmed the contact. “Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke with Guyanese President Dr. Mohamed Irfaan Ali to reaffirm the United States’ unwavering support for Guyana’s sovereignty,” the department said late Wednesday. Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters that Washington supports a peaceful resolution.

       Advertisement

       Brazil reinforced its northern border with armored vehicles and more troops, Reuters reported this week. Because Esequibo is largely inaccessible, the main road connecting Venezuela and Guyana runs through Brazil. Senior Brazilian diplomats have conveyed serious concerns to Venezuela, Reuters reported.

       In a referendum on Sunday, Maduro said, more than 95 percent of Venezuelan voters expressed support for annexing Esequibo.

       Story continues below advertisement

       That percentage could reflect the actual popularity of the measure. But the government’s claim that more than 10 million Venezuelans cast ballots in the vote “makes no sense,” according to Enderson Sequera, strategic director for the Venezuela-based political analysis firm Politiks. That would be an unusually high turnout for Venezuela.

       Venezuelan opposition backs candidate to challenge Maduro — if she’s allowed

       Oil is not the only motivating factor for Maduro, Sequera said. The fixation on Esequibo also represents a sense of political insecurity following María Corina Machado’s resounding victory in the opposition’s presidential primaries in October. Machado, a longtime government critic, could present a formidable challenge Maduro in an election next year.

       Now, Sequera said, “the government’s only options are to try to rile up nationalist sentiments with Guyana and gradually escalate the situation and to increase political repression and persecution.”

       Share

       333 Comments

       Loading...

       Subscribe to comment and get the full experience. Choose your plan →

       


标签:综合
关键词: Venezuela     Sequera     Brazil     advertisement     Maduro     Esequibo     oil-rich Guyana    
滚动新闻