Barbados PM restates Caricom’s ‘total support’ for Guyana’s territorial integrity

Barbadian Prime Minister Freundel Stuart (right) with Jorge Arreaza, Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela

(Barbados Nation) Barbadian Prime Minister Freundel Stuart met today with Jorge Arreaza, Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela. The Vice President was in Barbados as part of a regional tour to discuss Venezuela’s territorial and maritime claims in the region.

Barbadian Prime Minister Freundel Stuart (right) with Jorge Arreaza, Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
Barbadian Prime Minister Freundel Stuart (right) with Jorge Arreaza, Vice President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela

During their discussions, Prime Minister Stuart emphasised the need to maintain peace and stability as the basis for enhancing regional cooperation and the development of both Guyana and Venezuela. He welcomed Vice President Arreaza’s visit to Barbados and the Caribbean as a tangible demonstration of Vene-zuela’s commitment to those ideals.

Prime Minister Stuart reiterated the position adopted by Caricom at the 36th Regular Meeting of Heads of Government, held in Barbados from July 2 to 4, 2015. In this regard, he restated Barbados and Caricom’s total support for the integrity of Guyana’s territory and maritime space, as well as that of all Caricom states. He said that Barbados stood by Guyana as it sought the best means to address this issue.

He continued: “We are committed to assisting Venezuela and Guyana in this dispute, preferring at all times a peaceful solution. But as of now, having regard to the fact that there was an arbitral award in 1899 and having regard to the fact that the Geneva Agreement of 1966 has not yielded the kind of results that either Venezuela or Guyana expected, Cari-com’s formal position has to be a commitment to the territorial integrity of Guyana.”

Acknowledging that both countries had been trying to pursue a peaceful settlement for many years, Stuart expressed the view that the time had come for the issue to be concluded. “We cannot contemplate such an end if we do not have a mechanism in place, for in the event the peaceful solution we prefer does not happen, an alternative mechanism can be sprung into action that can settle the matter by juridical means,” he remarked.

Prime Minister Stuart told Vice President Arreaza that Barbados acknowledged that Venezuela had issued a new decree, namely Presidential Decree no 1859 of July 6, 2015, which had replaced Decree 1787. He informed that the new Decree was being studied by CARICOM experts.

Stuart emphasised the importance to Barbados of its relationship with Venezuela. He welcomed the efforts at communication on the part of the Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela aimed at maintaining the deep bonds of friendship, collaboration and partnership between the Governments and peoples of the Caribbean Community and Vene-zuela. (Barbados Govern-ment Information Service)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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