Opinion
Guyana accuses Venezuela of assembling troops near border
Guyana’s President David Granger said on Tuesday neighboring Venezuela had launched an “extraordinary military deployment” in the east of the country, near a disputed border area with Guyana.
“We have noticed during the month of September an extraordinary escalation of Venezuelan military activity in eastern Venezuela,” Granger said at his Georgetown office.
“It is a persistence of aggressive behavior, hostile behavior towards Guyana,” he said, adding the deployment was “mostly marine and various forms of ground forces.” He did not provide further details.
Venezuelan Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino said on Tuesday the armed forces were conducting military exercises in both the east and west of the country. “I call on the people of Venezuela to stay calm because we are seriously preparing ourselves,” Padrino said in a televised speech at the Fuerte Tiuna military base.
Granger’s comments come against the backdrop of a spike in tensions between Guyana and Venezuela – long divided by a centuries-old territorial dispute – due to a recent oil discovery off the coast of Guyana.
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has described newly-elected Granger as a “hostage of Exxon Mobil,” which discovered the oil in a potential boon for Guyana, whose economy relies heavily on rice, gold, diamonds and bauxite.
Many in Guyana, fear that their larger neighbor is seeking to lay hands on its newfound oil wealth. Exxon Mobil Corp is drilling in the Stabroek Block, about 190 km (120 miles) off Guyana’s coast.
Maduro’s critics say he is using the border dispute – as well as a more recent one with Colombia – to distract voters from high inflation, a severe recession and rampant crime ahead of December’s parliamentary elections.
Maduro has also deployed troops to municipalities near the Colombian border amid what he calls a crackdown on smuggling.
Price-fixed goods ranging from flour to gasoline are also smuggled over the border to Guyana, where they can be sold for a handsome profit.
Source: Reuters
