Sunday, October 6

Lula da Silva asks Nicolás Maduro not to take unilateral measures in the conflict over Essequibo and the Venezuelan president agrees to meet with Guyana

President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva urged his Venezuelan counterpart, Nicolás Maduro, to avoid “unilateral measures” that could aggravate the territorial dispute he has with Guyana.

In a statement issued by the Brazilian president’s office, it was reported that both leaders spoke by telephone on Saturday.

Lula raised with Maduro the growing concern in South America about the situation and made reference to the joint declaration of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay so that both parties can seek “a peaceful resolution.”

“We are a region of peace”Lula told Maduro, according to the statement.

Later this Saturday, Maduró published a statement on the social network the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (Celac), and that agrees to meet with Guyana over the conflict.

“In these conversations, the proposal was received to hold a high-level meeting with the Cooperative Republic of Guyana, which will be announced in the coming days,” said the president of Venezuela.

He added that “he accepts this call with approval and commitment.”

The president did not specify who made the proposal.

Guyana did not comment at the time, although hours earlier its president, Irfaan Ali, had said in X that the International Court of Justice in The Hague will be the one to resolve the conflict.

He maintained, however, that he was willing to dialogue. “We are not opposed to conversations and meetings as responsible people and as a country,” he said.

Brazil on alert

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
“What South America does not need is confusion,” said the president of Brazil.

The Brazilian leader had said last Tuesday that in 2024 will visit Guyana, where he will participate in the meeting that will bring together the countries that make up the Caribbean Community (Caricom).

The announcement of the visit came at a time of growing tension between Venezuela and Guyana, after a majority of Venezuelans voted last Sunday in a disputed referendum in favor of the annexation of the Essequibo region to their country.

President Nicolás Maduro requested that a law be approved to declare the creation of a Venezuelan state in Essequibo and a “comprehensive defense zone of Guayana Esequiba” in the town of Tumeremo.

Rising tensions led Brazil, which borders Venezuela and Guyana, to reinforce the presence of its troops on the border.

“The Brazilian Ministry of Defense has been monitoring the situation. Defensive actions have intensified in the northern border region of the country, promoting a greater military presence“Brazilian government sources said the week before the referendum.

A mural in Venezuela where it reads:
For decades, Venezuela has considered Essequibo as an “area under claim.”

“Fear of war”

Brazil confirmed the sending 28 armored vehicles to the state of Roraima, which is on alert because it shares a border with countries in conflict.

Although the deployment of these vehicles was already planned for operations against illegal mining in the area, the Brazilian Ministry of Defense announced that they will be available in the event of an eventual escalation of the conflict.

Brazil wants to send a clear message to Venezuela about the unfeasibility of escalating the crisis with Guyana, according to diplomatic sources consulted by BBC News Brazil.

The president of Brazil had already said last Sunday that he hoped there was “common sense.”

“What South America does not need is confusion. We can’t keep thinking about fighting. I hope that common sense prevails, on the side of Venezuela and Guyana,” said Lula da Silva.

Although the government says that it does not believe that the escalation of the conflict will end in a military confrontation, Venezuela’s position worries the Brazilian Foreign Ministry because it could put the tradition of peaceful conflict resolution territories in South America.

“Humanity should be afraid of war. War only takes place when common sense is lacking. A conversation is worth more than a war,” the Brazilian president told the press.

“If there is something we need to grow and improve the lives of our people, it is to keep our heads down, work hard to improve the lives of our people and not think about fighting, not making up stories,” he added.

Brazil’s position

For Brazil, the concern is not new.

Already on November 9, the presidents of Brazil and Guyana spoke by videoconference and, according to a Brazilian diplomat consulted by BBC News Brazil, the Guyanese president expressed his concern about the referendum in Venezuela to his Brazilian counterpart.

Two weeks later, on November 22, Brazil decided to send ambassador Celso Amorim to Caracashis special advisor for international affairs, who met with Nicolás Maduro in the Venezuelan capital.

At the meeting, according to the same sources, Maduro tried to reassure Amorim, who showed concern about the matter and reinforced his position that the dispute should be resolved peacefully.

A few days later, members of the Brazilian Foreign Affairs and Defense ministries began to jointly analyze the crisis in the region.

Based on this analysis, the Ministry of Defense published a note on Wednesday prior to the referendum announcing the intensification of defensive actions on the border.

Map of the Essequibo region.

Lula and the Guyanese president were scheduled to meet a few days ago in Dubai, in the Emirates. United Arab Emirates, during their visit to the country on the occasion of the UN climate summit (COP 28), but the bilateral meeting did not take place.

Brazil and Guyana – which have maintained diplomatic relations since 1968, two years after the declaration of independence of the former British colony – have had a good relationship for some time.

Brazil and Guyana share a 1,605 km border with a land connection through the bridge over the Tacutu River, inaugurated in 2009, and which is key for communication between the two countries.

The border between Venezuela and the Essequibo region is predominantly made up of dense forests, making the movement of troops and armored vehicles difficult.

For Augusto Teixeira, visiting professor at the Department of War Studies at King’s College London, the few areas that would be available on the border for a Venezuelan incursion only allow the use of a few foot infantry forces.

The president of the National Assembly of Venezuela, Jorge Rodríguez, shows the new map of Venezuela with the annexation of Guyana.
The government of Nicolás Maduro presented a new map of Venezuela that includes Essequibo.

Relations between Brazil and Guyana deepened starting in the 1990s with the growing number of Brazilians who took up residence in the neighboring country, according to the Brazilian Foreign Ministry.

Brazil estimates that some 300,000 people live in Essequibo and that a conflict in the area could have economic and social repercussions in nearby Brazilian regions.

An element that also worries the Brazilian government is the uncertainty about the decision-making process within the Maduro government.

Shortly after last Friday the International Court of Justice ordered Venezuela not to take any measure “that modifies the situation that currently prevails” in the territory in Essequibo, Maduro wrote on social networks that he does not recognize the court as an instrument to resolve the dispute with Guyana and once again called on the population to participate in the referendum held on Sunday.

“They cannot attack the right of the Venezuelan community to express themselves through voting,” Maduro said at the time.

The fear among part of Brazilian diplomacy is that Maduro politically exploits the dispute over the Essequibo ahead of the 2024 presidential elections.

The military response

International relations experts interviewed by BBC News Brazil are divided on the possibility that the crisis around the Essequibo will lead to a armed conflict.

For researcher Lucas Carlos Lima, from the Federal University of Minas Gerais, the cost for Venezuela is too high for this option to be viable.

“If we do so, Venezuela would be violating international law and could generate different reactions within the international community and the countries of the region,” Lima said.

Diplomats interviewed by BBC News Brazil said that Lula’s government has been sending clear messages to the Venezuelan government about the impossibility of escalating the crisis with Guyana.

“Our common commitment to the integration of South America is to reiterate to each of our twelve countries our commitment to the peaceful resolution of disputes,” said Brazilian Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira.

For Lucas Carlos Lima, Brazil has tried to avoid an increase in tensions in the region.

“Brazil also has part of its borders with Guyana determined by arbitration and does not want this type of peaceful agreement to become a dispute,” said the specialist.

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