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World News Notizia

Venezuela,Guyana,Border Dispute

Venezuela recently deployed military forces to the Guyanese border in what may be an attempt to annex part of the smaller country’s national territory. Media coverage has generally focused on the rich natural resources of the area which Venezuela may be interested in– including oil, gold, and diamonds–but others including the region’s Indigenous peoples say its ecological role is just as important for Guyana to protect. “If we truly value this land – not only for its natural resources but for its unique beauty, its cultural and biological diversity, and its outsized role in combating climate change – then we must defend it from foreign interests and extractive industries in equal measure,” argues a Goldman Prize-winning Indigenous leader from the region in a new op-ed

Venezuela recently deployed military forces to the Guyanese border in what may be an attempt to annex part of the smaller country’s national territory.

Despite a written agreement in December between Maduro and Guyanese President Irfaan Ali denouncing the use of force, Venezuela’s military deployment signals a departure from that agreement. It has the potential to escalate tensions further. This development happened days after Exxon Mobil announced its intention to continue oil exploration in the offshore territory contested by Venezuela.

The Guiana Shield is located at the start of two atmospheric rivers that carry moisture across South America. Map courtesy of Rainforest Foundation US.Guyana’s western border, disputed by Venezuela, is over 1,800 kilometers and largely unmarked, winding through dense rainforest, rivers, and savannah, with few paved roads. The majority of inhabitants on all sides of this border are Indigenous peoples.

This has caused some scientists to refer to the region as a hot-spot, or a “thermostat,” its forests regulating temperatures across the Amazon basin and capturing millions of tons of carbon in the process.‘ Once a certain threshold of deforestation is crossed, the world’s largest tropical forest would lose the necessary moisture to sustain itself, causing a mass die-off of trees and incalculable damage to life on our planet.

 

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