Guyana, Venezuela foreign ministers to meet in Trinidad
Written by Demerara Waves
Thursday, 29 September 2011 16:54
Source
Guyana and Venezuela’s Foreign Ministers are to meet on Friday in Trinidad and Tobago in the wake of Caracas’ recent distress with the former’s application for the extension of its continental shelf.
A brief release from the foreign ministry in Georgetown Thursday stated that the two ministers will meet in Port of Spain.
“The two Foreign Ministers have invited Professor Norman Girvan, the Personal Representative of the Secretary of the United Nations, to be present at their meeting,” the release concluded.
Girvan was appointed the UN Good Officer in 2010 to assist Guyana and Venezuela in the search for a practical settlement of the controversy that emerged from Venezuela’s claim to a significant amount of Guyana’s territory.
Venezuela’s Foreign Ministry said Monday a new request by Guyana to the United Nations to expand its continental shelf outer sea limits from 200 to 350 miles constituted an “irregular situation” and sought to chastise Guyana for not informing Venezuela directly.
According to the ministry, Venezuela was notified on September 7 of Guyana’s new presentation by the United Nations.
But Takuba Lodge in Georgetown responded the following day stating that the Venezuelan Embassy was provided with a copy of the Preliminary Information it submitted to the UN under the cover of a Note Verbale dated May 13, 2009.
The Guyana Foreign Ministry said the government values the relationship which has developed with Venezuela in the recent past and that it was in that context it shared the May 2009 Preliminary Information and the Executive Summary of the full submission this month.
The controversy arose out of Venezuela’s contention that the Arbitral Award of October 3, 1899, that definitively delimited the land boundary between Guyana and Venezuela, is null and void.
Written by Demerara Waves
Thursday, 29 September 2011 16:54
Source
Guyana and Venezuela’s Foreign Ministers are to meet on Friday in Trinidad and Tobago in the wake of Caracas’ recent distress with the former’s application for the extension of its continental shelf.
A brief release from the foreign ministry in Georgetown Thursday stated that the two ministers will meet in Port of Spain.
“The two Foreign Ministers have invited Professor Norman Girvan, the Personal Representative of the Secretary of the United Nations, to be present at their meeting,” the release concluded.
Girvan was appointed the UN Good Officer in 2010 to assist Guyana and Venezuela in the search for a practical settlement of the controversy that emerged from Venezuela’s claim to a significant amount of Guyana’s territory.
Venezuela’s Foreign Ministry said Monday a new request by Guyana to the United Nations to expand its continental shelf outer sea limits from 200 to 350 miles constituted an “irregular situation” and sought to chastise Guyana for not informing Venezuela directly.
According to the ministry, Venezuela was notified on September 7 of Guyana’s new presentation by the United Nations.
But Takuba Lodge in Georgetown responded the following day stating that the Venezuelan Embassy was provided with a copy of the Preliminary Information it submitted to the UN under the cover of a Note Verbale dated May 13, 2009.
The Guyana Foreign Ministry said the government values the relationship which has developed with Venezuela in the recent past and that it was in that context it shared the May 2009 Preliminary Information and the Executive Summary of the full submission this month.
The controversy arose out of Venezuela’s contention that the Arbitral Award of October 3, 1899, that definitively delimited the land boundary between Guyana and Venezuela, is null and void.