KINGSTOWN, St. Vincent, CMC -St Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves Thursday described as “unfortunate” a photograph showing him and his Foreign Affairs Minister, Keisal Melissa Peters, with the map of Venezuela that includes Guyana’s Essequibo County.
Prime Minister Gonsalves, is also the Pro-Tempore Chairman of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) that played a major role in getting Maduro and Ali to meet in Kingstown on December 14 last year.
The discussions were facilitated by Gonsalves and Dominica’s Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit, who is also the chairman of the 15-member Caribbean Community (CARICOM).
Gonsalves and Skerrit, together with Celso Amorim, special adviser and personal envoy of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, president of Brazil, acted as principal Interlocutors.
The meeting led to the Argyle Declaration easing the tension between the two countries over the ownership of the Essequibo region that makes up about two-thirds of Guyana and is home to 125,000 of the country’s 800,000 citizens.
On Wednesday, Antigua and Barbuda’s Permanent Representative to the United States and the Organisation of American States (OAS), Sir Ronald Sanders posted a copy of the photograph on his Facebook page.
The Guyanese-born diplomat said he believes that Prime Minister Gonsalves was unaware that the Venezuelan map indicates the annexure of Essequibo region.
In his letter to the two presidents, Prime Minister Gonsalves said he had been “advised that the event at which this photograph was taken was one commemorating the life and work of the great Liberator, Simon Bolivar”.
He said the event took place on the grounds of the residence/ office of the Charge d’Affaires of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela to St. Vincent and the Grenadines.
Gonsalves, the longest serving head of government in CARICOM, said that “it is unfortunate that this innocent inadvertence on my part has been used by some to drum up, unnecessarily, antipathy of one kind or another.
He reminded the leaders of the “Joint Declaration at Argyle for Dialogue and Peace Between Guyana and Venezuela for all of us, especially both of you, to apply and build upon.”
Gonsalves said he has “spoken to my friends” Irfaan and his Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo “about this matter of the “papier-mâché” depiction,” adding “hopefully it has been laid to rest, where it ought properly to reside among the assorted ghosts from the past, which ought never to rule us from the grave”.
According to the Argyle Declaration “both States agreed to meet again in Brazil, within the next three months, or at another agreed time, to consider any matter with implications for the territory in dispute, including the above-mentioned update of the joint commission”.
The declaration had also indicated that both countries had agreed that “directly or indirectly, will not threaten or use force against one another in any circumstances, including those consequential to any existing controversies between the two States”.
They also “agreed that any controversies between the two States will be resolved in accordance with international law, including the Geneva Agreement dated February 17, 1966” and are “committed to the pursuance of good neighborliness, peaceful coexistence, and the unity of Latin America and the Caribbean”.
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