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United Nations General Assembly President on T&T’s Stance on Venezuela: A Wise, Pragmatic Choice

 Minister of Foreign and Caricom Affairs Dr Amery Browne, right, presents a gift to UN General Assembly president Dennis Francis during the latter’s visit to the ministry’s St Clair office yesterday.
Minister of Foreign and Caricom Affairs Dr Amery Browne, right, presents a gift to UN General Assembly president Dennis Francis during the latter’s visit to the ministry’s St Clair office yesterday. (TtGuardian)

Shirley Bahadur, TT Guardian

PORT SPAIN
EnergiesNet.com 08 06 2024

Unit­ed Na­tions Gen­er­al As­sem­bly (UN­GA) pres­i­dent, Am­bas­sador Den­nis Fran­cis, says Trinidad and To­ba­go’s de­ci­sion to re­main neu­tral on the Venezuela pres­i­den­tial elec­tion im­passe is a “wise and prag­mat­ic” one.

Fran­cis was speak­ing hours af­ter he land­ed in T&T on Sun­day for a four-day vis­it, which saw him kick off his agen­da by meet­ing with the Min­is­ter of For­eign Cari­com Af­fairs Dr Amery Browne and act­ing pres­i­dent Nigel de Fre­itas yes­ter­day. To­day, he will vis­it his al­ma mater, Wood­brook Sec­ondary School.

In a con­ver­sa­tion on The Big In­ter­view pro­gramme on Sun­day af­ter­noon, which is set to be aired this week­end on CNC3, T&T-born Fran­cis, who was elect­ed pres­i­dent of the UN­GA last June, said the de­ci­sions by gov­ern­ments, past and present, not to take a po­si­tion on the Venezuela is­sue is the right one.

In ref­er­ence to Row­ley’s an­nounce­ment over the week­end that the T&T Gov­ern­ment would not be tak­ing any po­si­tion on the elec­tion im­passe in Venezuela, Fran­cis said, “Neu­tral­i­ty is al­ways a good po­si­tion, par­tic­u­lar­ly in a sit­u­a­tion of do­mes­tic con­flict. Why should any gov­ern­ment take a risk of be­ing seen to be aligned with one side as op­posed to the oth­er when the sit­u­a­tion can be very flu­id and change? I think the neu­tral­i­ty po­si­tion is a wise and prag­mat­ic one.”

Speak­ing at a Peo­ple’s Na­tion­al Move­ment event on Fri­day on the Venezuela is­sue, Row­ley said, “If there are chal­lenges to the re­sults in Venezuela, we will ob­serve the facts as they sur­face, but T&T will not be out there on any­body’s in­struc­tion, ring­ing any­body’s bell, and tak­ing any­body’s bush tea for a fever that we didn’t cre­ate.”

Not­ing the re­cent protests sparked by the re­sult, in which in­cum­bent Pres­i­dent Nico­las Maduro has been de­clared the win­ner but the Op­po­si­tion says it has ev­i­dence to prove its can­di­date Ed­mun­do Gon­za­lez won, Fran­cis said what once looked like a po­lit­i­cal prob­lem is now look­ing like it is be­com­ing a con­sti­tu­tion­al one.

“That’s a prob­lem for the Venezue­lan peo­ple to re­solve – not third par­ties. Third par­ties might as­sist and sup­port the process of rec­on­cil­i­a­tion but the re­spon­si­bil­i­ty to fix it, to make it nor­mal, so that the coun­try can pro­ceed on its way, that re­spon­si­bil­i­ty rests in the hands of the Venezue­lan peo­ple and the au­thor­i­ties,” Fran­cis said.

The T&T na­tion­al, who has spent his life in diplo­ma­cy and took the oath as UN­GA pres­i­dent last Sep­tem­ber, said the in­ter­na­tion­al body will al­ways ad­vo­cate for democ­ra­cy and he hopes that Venezue­lan au­thor­i­ties use in­sti­tu­tions such as the In­ter­na­tion­al Court of Jus­tice (ICJ) to work out their dif­fer­ences.

“What I would like to see is a de­lib­er­ate, clear-eyed ef­fort to re­solve the is­sue peace­ful­ly in or­der to avert the pos­si­bil­i­ty of a wider con­fronta­tion in Venezuela. That would not be good for Venezuela and it would not be good for Latin Amer­i­ca, the Caribbean and the in­ter­na­tion­al fi­nan­cial sys­tem,” he said.

The top T&T diplo­mat said there have been 55 con­flicts al­ready this year glob­al­ly and the world can­not af­ford any­more, par­tic­u­lar­ly with­in the Latin Amer­i­can re­gion.

On a sim­i­lar fron­tier, Den­nis al­so ad­dressed the lin­ger­ing ten­sion be­tween Venezuela and Guyana over the Es­se­qui­bo re­gion. The bor­der dis­pute was used in Maduro’s cam­paign in the build-up to the Ju­ly 28 elec­tion.

Fran­cis said he “takes com­fort” in the de­ci­sion by both na­tions to take their dis­pute to the ICJ for ad­ju­di­ca­tion.

“This is good for prob­lem solv­ing. It is when that process is not fol­lowed in con­flict, when coun­tries de­cide to go for broke and to launch mil­i­tary ac­tion, that is what be­comes prob­lem­at­ic be­cause that sets off a chain of events that im­pacts all coun­tries and all peo­ples,” Fran­cis added.

He is sched­uled to meet with Prime Min­is­ter Row­ley on this vis­it be­fore de­part­ing to­mor­row.

guardian.co.tt 08 06 2024

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