Berliner Boersenzeitung - Venezuela holds referendum over Essequibo land dispute with Guyana

EUR -
AED 4.271996
AFN 80.420025
ALL 97.612169
AMD 447.055732
ANG 2.08159
AOA 1066.558008
ARS 1482.128904
AUD 1.783996
AWG 2.093571
AZN 1.978892
BAM 1.956044
BBD 2.350493
BDT 141.327618
BGN 1.957535
BHD 0.438655
BIF 3469.432512
BMD 1.163095
BND 1.494286
BOB 8.044003
BRL 6.490649
BSD 1.164145
BTN 100.219494
BWP 15.629948
BYN 3.809775
BYR 22796.661917
BZD 2.338392
CAD 1.595475
CDF 3356.692055
CHF 0.932381
CLF 0.029215
CLP 1121.099761
CNY 8.348638
CNH 8.350993
COP 4677.683138
CRC 587.473237
CUC 1.163095
CUP 30.822017
CVE 110.278748
CZK 24.63028
DJF 207.095817
DKK 7.462883
DOP 70.308765
DZD 151.622902
EGP 57.453994
ERN 17.446425
ETB 161.751965
FJD 2.622666
FKP 0.867067
GBP 0.866365
GEL 3.151709
GGP 0.867067
GHS 12.136513
GIP 0.867067
GMD 83.164702
GNF 10101.259261
GTQ 8.938114
GYD 243.560363
HKD 9.127097
HNL 30.467798
HRK 7.538016
HTG 152.849055
HUF 399.244568
IDR 18991.305865
ILS 3.911401
IMP 0.867067
INR 100.199242
IQD 1524.990111
IRR 48980.848634
ISK 142.455961
JEP 0.867067
JMD 186.163208
JOD 0.824637
JPY 172.065362
KES 150.408751
KGS 101.713218
KHR 4665.581629
KMF 492.318701
KPW 1046.785507
KRW 1618.099529
KWD 0.355488
KYD 0.970121
KZT 620.597366
LAK 25105.1297
LBP 104307.403352
LKR 351.223785
LRD 233.409098
LSL 20.61167
LTL 3.434317
LVL 0.703545
LYD 6.331789
MAD 10.526712
MDL 19.802469
MGA 5180.645839
MKD 61.567675
MMK 2442.163159
MNT 4170.690885
MOP 9.411573
MRU 46.308773
MUR 53.153087
MVR 17.923336
MWK 2018.651653
MXN 21.792792
MYR 4.938467
MZN 74.391995
NAD 20.61167
NGN 1780.663561
NIO 42.845341
NOK 11.846646
NPR 160.35099
NZD 1.947597
OMR 0.447316
PAB 1.164145
PEN 4.143817
PGK 4.820601
PHP 66.424556
PKR 331.548532
PLN 4.246336
PYG 9010.123236
QAR 4.232728
RON 5.066087
RSD 117.164606
RUB 91.398174
RWF 1682.209711
SAR 4.364778
SBD 9.652347
SCR 17.094531
SDG 698.439889
SEK 11.253159
SGD 1.494636
SHP 0.91401
SLE 26.631791
SLL 24389.525105
SOS 665.282937
SRD 43.276414
STD 24073.718133
STN 24.503055
SVC 10.18627
SYP 15122.392678
SZL 20.607569
THB 37.689514
TJS 11.204897
TMT 4.082463
TND 3.422327
TOP 2.724082
TRY 46.965903
TTD 7.902985
TWD 34.206277
TZS 3032.578053
UAH 48.617361
UGX 4171.520037
USD 1.163095
UYU 46.915849
UZS 14735.837025
VES 136.041361
VND 30426.56509
VUV 139.326667
WST 3.078598
XAF 656.038784
XAG 0.03047
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.143323
XCG 2.098062
XDR 0.815902
XOF 656.038784
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.364024
ZAR 20.601262
ZMK 10469.249284
ZMW 26.804342
ZWL 374.516114
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Venezuela holds referendum over Essequibo land dispute with Guyana
Venezuela holds referendum over Essequibo land dispute with Guyana / Photo: Pedro Rances Mattey - AFP/File

Venezuela holds referendum over Essequibo land dispute with Guyana

Venezuelans began voting Sunday in a referendum that the government hopes will strengthen its century-old claim to the oil-rich Essequibo territory controlled by neighboring Guyana.

Text size:

"Essequibo is ours!" say posters plastered on walls lining the streets in Caracas, part of an intensive campaign by the government of President Nicolas Maduro, who is seeking re-election next year.

"Today we are voting as Venezuela in just one color, one feeling. Our vote is for Venezuela to be respected," Maduro told reporters after he voted at a military base.

Voting started at 6 am (1000 GMT) and was to end at 6 pm (2200 GMT), with results expected in the early hours of Monday morning.

The Maduro government has said it is not seeking justification to invade or annex the territory, as some in Guyana, a former British colony, fear.

And regardless of the outcome of the vote by around 20 million eligible Venezuelans, little will change in the short term: The people of Essequibo are not voting, and the referendum is nonbinding.

But tensions have been rising since Guyana took bids in September for several offshore oil exploration blocks, and after a major new find was announced in October. Its petroleum reserves are similar to those of Kuwait, with the highest reserves per capita in the world.

Meanwhile, Maduro's government has sharpened its rhetoric and conducted military exercises in the area.

And Brazil has strengthened its own troop presence near the border with Venezuela, saying it is concerned by the "climate of tension."

Venezuela has claimed the huge territory for decades -- even as its 160,000 square kilometers (62,000 square miles) represent more than two-thirds of Guyana, and its population of 125,000 is one-fifth Guyana's total.

Caracas contends that the Essequibo River to the east of the region is the natural border between the two countries, as declared in 1777 under Spanish rule, and that Britain wrongly appropriated Venezuelan lands in the 19th century.

Guyana, however, asserts that the border was set in the British colonial era and was confirmed in 1899 by a court of arbitration. It says the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the UN's top judicial body, has validated this finding.

Guyana has asked the ICJ to block the referendum, saying it amounts to a violation of international rights, but in vain.

On Friday, the ICJ called on Caracas to take no action that would modify the disputed lands -- but it did not mention the referendum. And Caracas had vowed to go ahead regardless.

"We believe that justice, not force, should be the arbiter of international disputes," Guyanese President Irfaan Ali said Friday from the United Arab Emirates, where he was attending the COP28 international climate summit.

Ali met there with British Foreign Minister David Cameron to discuss the controversy.

Maduro, for his part, lashed out at Ali on Friday, calling him "reckless (and) insolent" and suggesting he was working for US energy giant ExxonMobil.

- Five questions -

The referendum Sunday covers five questions, including proposals for the creation of a Venezuelan province to be called "Guyana Essequibo," giving the inhabitants Venezuelan citizenship, as well as a call to reject the ICJ's jurisdiction.

The Maduro government expects an overwhelmingly positive result, strengthening its claim.

Opposition politicians, most of whom also support the claim, have generally been reticent about the referendum.

But Maria Corina Machado, who hopes to oppose Maduro in next year's presidential elections, has called the referendum a "distraction," saying that it should be suspended and that sovereignty is not something a government should ask about -- "you just exercise it."

Maduro has mobilized his party and senior members of his government in a vigorous campaign for a resounding "yes" vote.

In the streets of Caracas, many Venezuelans said they are motivated to vote.

"We have a commitment to the country," said Marlis Palmes, a homemaker. "I congratulate those who agree. And let history be the judge of the others."

(O.Joost--BBZ)