Maduro complains
meeting with Granger
was “tense and difficult”
but he is happy with outcome
A release from the Venezuelan Ministry of Foreign Affairs
said Maduro was nonetheless happy that
the meeting had opened
a dialogue for the two countries
to work together in resolving the territorial controversy
over Guyana’s Essequibo region.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has described
his meeting on Sunday night
with Guyana’s Head of State David Granger
as “tense and difficult”.
A release from the Venezuelan Ministry of Foreign Affairs
said Maduro was nonetheless happy that the meeting
had opened a dialogue for the two countries
to work together
in resolving the territorial controversy
over Guyana’s Essequibo region.
The release said the meeting concluded with
“peace-diplomatic relations” being restored and
a decision to return ambassadors to their respective tasks.
Mr. Maduro reported that
the General Secretariat of the UN established
a special technical committee
that will visit Venezuela
in the context of the Geneva Accord
for a comprehensive work on the circumstances
and the current situation of
the Venezuelan claim on Guyana’s Essequibo.
The group had previously been prevented
from carrying out its probe in Venezuela.
“The Secretary-General is committed after that visit,
to do a study of all the options that gives us
the Geneva Agreement and Article 33 of the UN Charter.
Venezuela has insisted on the need to activate the good offices
which it is the final decision of consensus
between Guyana, Venezuela
and the Geneva Agreement and the General Secretariat,”
the release quoted Maduro as saying.
He said too,
“our peoples are destined to the brotherhood, to approach,
we love the brotherly people of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana,”
said Venezuelan President who reiterated that it was agreed
“to work together because there is no other way forward”.
The Venezuelan President said
he told the Guyana President to
“let us look in the eyes, talk, let’s talk.”
President Maduro said he told Granger
that the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
“has never been, nor will be, an imperialist country,
pro-imperialist, pro-colonialist.”
The meeting was held at the request of
the president of Venezuela
and in the context of the 70th General Assembly of the UN.
Both Ministers of Foreign Affairs
from Guyana and Venezuela were in attendance.