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Venezuela will stop buying Guyana rice amid escalating border dispute

Monday, July 13th 2015 - 09:21 UTC
Full article 12 comments
Finance minister Jordan said Venezuelan officials informed him that they will be acquiring rice from other suppliers, including Suriname, by the end of the year. Finance minister Jordan said Venezuelan officials informed him that they will be acquiring rice from other suppliers, including Suriname, by the end of the year.
Guyana Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo said the timing of the rice announcement made it at least appear that it is connected to the border fight. Guyana Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo said the timing of the rice announcement made it at least appear that it is connected to the border fight.
President Granger said Guyana does not have the military capacity to challenge Venezuela and his government would seek an international judicial settlement President Granger said Guyana does not have the military capacity to challenge Venezuela and his government would seek an international judicial settlement

Venezuela has decided to stop buying much of Guyana's rice crop amid an escalating border dispute between the two neighboring countries, the Guyanese finance minister said. The administration of president Nicolas Maduro has in the past four years purchased about 40% of Guyana's rice production, about 200,000 tons, paying for it with oil that amounts to about half of Guyana's daily supply needs.

 Finance Minister Winston Jordan said Venezuelan officials informed him during a visit to Caracas that they will be acquiring rice from other suppliers, including Suriname, by the end of the year.

“It will be a significant blow to us,” said Peter DeGroot, president of the Rice Millers Association.

The exchange of rice for oil was done under the Petrocaribe program, a Venezuelan initiative that provides fuel at generous financial terms to Caribbean and Central American countries. Guyana remains a member of Petrocaribe and will continue to buy oil from Venezuela, Jordan said.

Jordan said Venezuela did not disclose the reason for its decision, but the long-running border dispute has been heating up following the recent disclosure of a major oil discovery off Guyana in waters that Venezuela also claims. President Maduro last week announced he was recalling his ambassador in Guyana for consultations and would review relations between the countries.

Venezuela has long refused to recognize a boundary drawn in 1899 and it claims about two-thirds of Guyana's territory as its own. Venezuela published a new map in May that expanded its maritime territory to essentially leave Guyana landlocked.

Guyana Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo said the timing of the rice announcement made it at least appear that it is connected to the border fight.

“It will have to be considered whether Venezuela's position of the non-renewal of the Petrocaribe barter agreement is indeed an act of economic sanction against Guyana,” he said in a statement.

President David Granger told Parliament that Guyana does not have the military capacity to challenge Venezuela and his government would seek an international judicial settlement over the border issue.

“Guyana has never used aggression against any state,” said Granger, a retired army general. “In as much as we are a peace loving state we will not allow our territorial integrity to be violated and threatened.”

Top Comments

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  • Skip

    There's no escalation.

    Just Venezuela making lots of noise.

    Jul 13th, 2015 - 11:39 am 0
  • yankeeboy

    I don't think Venezuelans should be blocking any food into the country or using the scarce U$ to buy it from somewhere else.
    Latins don't often think through the consequences of their actions.

    Jul 13th, 2015 - 02:36 pm 0
  • Conqueror

    A tip for Guyana. Contact the Commonwealth Secretariat. Want to sell a million tons? Want to receive real money? Learn who your friends are. And never buy or sell with venezuela.

    Jul 13th, 2015 - 05:12 pm 0
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