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Former Member

UN Leader Offers Assistance in Guyana-Venezuela Dispute

 

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Friday offered assistance to resolve an escalating border dispute between Guyana and Venezuela.

 

Speaking at a press conference ahead of a summit of the 15-member Caribbean Community, Ban said his chief of staff will meet with Venezuela's foreign minister and might dispatch a mission to both countries if there is interest. Guyana's government said last month that it planned to formally ask the U.N. to intervene.

 

Venezuela has long-claimed about two-thirds of Guyana and has become more insistent about a large marine area where Exxon Mobil Corp. says it made a significant oil discovery.

 

Caricom invited Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to the summit in Barbados, but he did not attend.

 

Ban also urged leaders of the Dominican Republic and Haiti to maintain a dialogue at a time when the Dominican Republic is cracking down on migrants from neighboring Haiti.

 

"I strongly believe it is critical for them to engage in a frank and constructive dialogue," he said.

 

The Dominican Republic recently announced it would start deporting non-citizens who did not enroll in an immigration registration program. The government has said some 31,000 people have left voluntarily.

 

Following Ban's comments, Haitian president Michel Martelly said he was concerned about the situation.

 

"We've been trying to get a protocol with the Dominican Republic so we can agree on who's coming, when they're coming, how they're coming, how many are coming," he said.

 

Ban also said the U.N. will provide Haiti with technical support for upcoming elections.

 

Ban also presented details of a U.N. report released last month that calls for increasing HIV prevention efforts and stepping up the fight against AIDS. He noted that a quarter of a million people in the region live with HIV, and that punishing laws and stigma worsen the epidemic.

 

Much of the Caribbean is hostile to gay rights, and islands including Jamaica and St. Lucia have laws that prohibit consensual sex between men. The laws are rarely applied, but gays still face discrimination and in some cases, violence.

 

"Homophobia threatens both human rights and public health," Ban said. "We cannot tolerate discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, nor on the basis of gender identity. We must also defend the human rights of sex workers and of people who inject drugs."

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From Odeen's article:

In 1843, Fortique, the Venezuelan Ambassador in London, requested the speedy conclusion of a Treaty to define the boundary between Venezuela and British Guiana. Then in a note of the 31 January 1844, he presented the first formal statement of the Venezuelan claim that the territory of the Republic extended to the Essequibo River.

The main grounds on which this claim was based were the following:

1. Spain was the first discoverer and occupant of the New World

2. The Spaniards had at an early date explored and occupied the Orinoco and all the contiguous country, and the Barima, Moruka and Pomeroon Rivers.

3. At the time of the Treaty of Munster, the Dutch had no possessions in Guiana, or none at least on the northern and western side of the Essequibo.

4. The Spanish dominion extended as far as the Essequibo, and any possession of the Dutch to the west of that river was an usurpation, and had not been approved by Spain.

FM

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