A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, June 10, 2015
What’s a little oil between neighbors? Venezuela-Guyana tensions flare.
Newly
elected President David Granger of Guyana after voting at the
Enterprise Primary School in Georgetown Guyana, on May 11. (AP
Photo/Adrian Narine)
There's a border somewhere in the vast no-man's land of jungles and
rivers between Venezuela and Guyana, but for more than a century the two
countries have not been able to agree where it is.
The dispute flares up periodically whenever there's something at stake. Only now it's extending out into the ocean.
That's where Exxon Mobil Corp., drilling with a license from Guyana,
said it made a significant petroleum discovery last month, 120 miles
offshore in an area known as the Stabroek Block.
Venezuela, which has the world's largest proven petroleum reserves, promptly reasserted its claim on
the area, in the form of a May 27 territorial decree by President
Nicolas Maduro, whose government is in the throes of a deep financial
crisis.
The decree rests on Venezuela's long-standing claim to the disputed area
on shore, which is equal to roughly two-thirds of Guyana-controlled
territory. It encompasses the resource-rich forests and savannas west of
the Essequibo River, the largest waterway between South America's mighty Amazon and Orinoco rivers.
Maduro's decree essentially projects Venezuela's claim out into the
Atlantic Ocean, calling the area an "operational zone for maritime
defense."
On Monday, the clash intensified when
the government of newly elected President David Granger issued a
statement calling Venezuela's claim a "threat to regional peace and
security" and a "flagrant violation of international law."
Guyana's Foreign Ministry warned that any attempt by Venezuela to enforce its claim would be "vigorously resisted."
"It is international law that must reign supreme and not the ambitions
of a larger State which wishes to trample upon the rights of a smaller
country in order to obstruct the sovereign right of Guyana to develop
its natural resources," the statement said.
The border disagreement between the two countries stretches back to an
1899 court ruling that Venezuela has never recognized. At the time, the
United States backed Venezuela's claims against Guyana, a former British
colony.
Before his death in 2013, the late Venezuela leader Hugo Chavez
alleviated the standoff with shipments of subsidized oil to Guyana's
left-leaning government.
But the election of Granger,
a former army general, unseated Guyana's long-ruling People's
Progressive Party and has also shaken up relations with Venezuela, which
gets 96 percent of its export earnings from oil.
Venezuela's Foreign Ministry has not tried to interfere with Exxon
Mobil's operations in the area, but it has repeatedly warned the company
that it does not recognize the drilling license issued by the Guyanese
government.
In 2013, Venezuela's navy detained a ship and drilling crew working for
Texas-based Anadarko Petroleum Corp. in another disputed offshore area.
Venezuela and Exxon Mobil have a long-standing dispute of their own. Last year, an international arbitration court ruled that Caracas owes the company$1.6 billion in compensation for properties nationalized by Chavez in 2007.
Nick Miroff is a Latin America correspondent for The Post, roaming from
the U.S.-Mexico borderlands to South America’s southern cone. He has
been a staff writer since 2006.


