Latest update April 16th, 2025 7:21 AM
Jul 29, 2015 News
US (Reuters) – Venezuela’s President, Nicolás Maduro, said he asked U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon for U.N. mediation in his country’s century-old border controversy with neighbouring Guyana.
The controversy was discussed by Maduro and Ban at a meeting yesterday morning in New York.
“We will continue to work through diplomatic means,” Maduro told reporters after the meeting. “We will overcome the provocations and aggressions of (Guyanese President David) Granger.”
Guyana is a small former British colony of around 740,000 people on the northeast shoulder of South America.
The controversy centres on land to the west of Guyana’s Essequibo River, encompassing around two-thirds of the English-speaking nation. The area has long been denoted on Venezuelan maps as a “reclamation zone,” while in practice Guyanese have long lived and mined there.
Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro (L) with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon yesterday in New York.
The controversy was revived in May after an offshore oil discovery by Exxon Mobil Corp which could be a major boost to the poor nation which depends heavily on rice, gold, diamonds and bauxite.
Maduro signed a decree soon after the announcement that created a theoretical “defense” zone offshore that would, in Venezuela’s eyes, leave the former British colony with no direct access to the Atlantic Ocean.
Guyana described the decree as a “flagrant violation of international law.”
Granger, elected Guyana’s President in May, spoke in Washington last week about the dispute, saying the controversy was “too much to bear for a country with fewer than a million people.”
Relations between the two nations were warm under Venezuela’s former President Hugo Chavez, but cooled significantly when Maduro took power in 2013.
Critics of Maduro say Venezuela’s high inflation, crime and his low approval ratings have led him to use Guyana as a distraction.
Apr 16, 2025
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