Venezuela
asks UN to take action against US over visa dispute
Venezuela
has sent a letter to the UN chief asking him to take measures against
the United States over the denial of visas for some members of its
delegation who are scheduled to attend the UN General Assembly in New
York.
21
September, 2013
The
letter sent by Venezuela’s ambassador to the UN, Samuel Moncada,
requests that the Secretary General Ban Ki-moon take action in
response to the apparent denial of visas, which President Maduro has
said seems intended to “create
logistical obstacles to impede”
next week’s visit.
Venezuela
further requests that the UN “demand
that the government of the US abide by its international obligations”
as host of the 68th UN General Assembly.
On
Thursday, President Maduro first raised the issue of the apparent
denial of visas to members of his country’s delegation, saying that
“we are not traveling to New
York as tourists on vacation…we are going to a UN function. I
cannot accept that they have denied a visa to Major General Wilmer
Barrientos”
and indicated a similar situation for another member of his cabinet.
Tension
between the countries spiked on Thursday when Venezuela’s foreign
minister, Elias Jaua, told media outlets that the US denied a plane
carrying Maduro entrance into its airspace. The aircraft was en route
to China. Washington later granted
the approval, stating that Venezuela’s request had not been
properly submitted. Jaua had denounced the move as “an
act of aggression.”
Citing
the incident, Bolivian President Evo Morales said he will file
a lawsuit
against the US government for crimes against humanity.
“I
would like to announce that we are preparing a lawsuit against Barack
Obama to condemn him for crimes against humanity,”
Morales said Thursday at a press conference in the Bolivian city of
Santa Cruz. He branded the US president as a “criminal” who
violates international law.
The Bolivian president also
suggested that the members of CELAC withdraw their ambassadors from
the US to send a message to the Obama Administration. As an
additional measure, he said he will call on the member nations of the
Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas to boycott the upcoming meeting
of the UN General Assembly. Members of the alliance include Antigua
and Barbuda, Cuba, Dominica, Ecuador, Nicaragua, Venezuela, and Saint
Lucia.
“The
US cannot be allowed to continue with its policy of intimidation and
blockading presidential flights,”
stressed Morales.
Ecuador
protests denial of US visas for plaintiffs in Chevron oil damages
case
Ecuador’s
foreign ministry announced on Friday that the US has denied visas to
a delegation that was set to travel to the UN General Assembly in New
York to present their case regarding an ongoing dispute against
Chevron-Texaco.
RT,
21
September, 2013
According
to the ministry’s official
announcement,
the visas for the five Ecuadorian nationals were returned by the
US Embassy in Quito “without
any explanation.”
That
group was to present testimony during a special event at the UN
regarding the ecological impact caused by Chevron-Texaco’s oil
operations in the Amazon rainforest region of Ecuador - which
contaminated two million hectares, according to the country’s
government.
At
stake in the case is a US$19 billion judgment awarded by an
Ecuadorean court against Chevron for cleanup and ecological damage,
which is currently being fought at The Hague.
That
case faced a setback on Tuesday when an interim ruling in favor of
Texaco Corp., later acquired by Chevron, found that a 1995 agreement
absolved the company from claims of “collective
damage.”
The
case against Chevron-Texaco has been ongoing for two decades, and
stems from the oil company’s operations in the Amazon which date
back to the period between 1972 and 1990.
In
February 2011, a judgment by a provincial court in Ecuador produced
the multi-billion dollar award against Chevron. However, as the
company currently has no holdings in Ecuador, the plaintiffs have
instead attempted to force payment in Canada, Brazil, and Argentina.
The
$19 billion verdict was the result of a 1993 lawsuit filed in New
York federal court by a group of American attorneys – including
Steven Donziger - on behalf of 88 residents of the Amazon rainforest.
In the intervening period, Texaco was acquired by Chevron in 2001,
and plaintiffs re-filed their case in Ecuador in 2003.
For
its part, Chevron insists that it was absolved of responsibility for
the environmental damages by a 1995 cleanup agreement. The oil
company places responsibility for the damages on Petroecuador,
Ecuador’s national oil company.
Chevron's
legal counsel, Hewitt Pate, said that Tuesday’s ruling "confirms
that the fraudulent claims against Chevron should not have been
brought in the first place."
It
was the oil company itself which petitioned the Permanent Court of
Arbitration at The Hague to intervene in the case, under the
authority of the US-Ecuador Bilateral Investment Treaty.
In
response to Tuesday’s interim ruling, Chris Gowen, an attorney
working with Donziger, said that he did not recognize its validity.
“The
tribunal’s decision illustrates that Chevron can only win when it
runs away from legitimate institutions and seeks refuge behind
pro-corporate ideologues. This decision was essentially purchased by
Chevron from a completely illegitimate ‘court’ with no authority
over the case and the facts,” Gowen
told Businessweek.
This
week, Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa launched a campaign
dubbed ‘Chevron’s
Dirty Hand’which
seeks a global boycott of Chevron based on its refusal to pay
billions in damages.
“We
will expose to the world Chevron's multimillion dollar campaign to
discredit this country. It is a campaign that involves taking away
preferential tariffs, boycotting international trade with the United
States," said
President Correa.
Interestingly,
at least a portion of the legal wrangling between Ecuador and Chevron
were exposed by diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks, which
indicated that the oil company had directly sought help on the matter
from the US government.
A March
2006 cable produced
by US officials in Quito pointed to communication with the oil
company on the topic of damages.
“In
previous meetings, Chevron reps have suggested that the [US
government] pressure the [Government of Ecuador] to assume
responsibility for the environmental damage in the areas once
operated by Chevron. Given the complex legal questions and the
questions of fact disputed in the case, it does not seem likely that
any available inducements would convince the [government of Ecuador]
to assume what may amount to billions of dollars of environmental
liability,” the
cable states.
If
enforced, the judgment against Chevron-Texaco would represent one of
the world’s largest, only coming in behind BP’s $20 billion fund
to compensate victims of the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.