Dear Editor,
The letter titled “The Hypocrisy of Selective Sovereignty” (KN, Jan 21) mistakes rhetorical confidence for legal clarity.[1]
In defending public political advocacy by a foreign envoy, it collapses a crucial distinction in international relations: the difference between supporting democratic values and intervening in a sovereign state’s internal political life.
Sovereignty is not a mood, nor is it a slogan deployed for convenience. It is a binding legal principle, codified most clearly in the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations (1961)—a treaty Canada has consistently invoked and benefited from across the world. Article 41 imposes a clear duty on diplomats: they must not interfere in the internal affairs of the receiving State.
This obligation does not evaporate when the subject matter is elections, governance, or “transparency.” In fact, it applies most strictly precisely in those moments.
The attempt to recast public exhortation as benign “conversation” is therefore misplaced. Diplomacy is not activism. When an accredited envoy publicly urges citizens to pressure their own elected representatives, or frames live constitutional and parliamentary questions for
domestic consumption, that conduct moves beyond engagement with institutions and into participation in political process.
International law does not judge such conduct by intention alone, but by role and effect.
There is, moreover, a deeper irony that the original writer entirely misses. The fact that two Guyanese citizens are now devoting their intellectual energy to debating the Canadian High Commissioner’s public pronouncements, rather than to advancing Guyana’s own policy development, institutional strengthening, or national priorities, already signals a failure of diplomatic productivity. A High Commissioner’s role is to facilitate constructive state-to-state engagement, investment, technical cooperation, and capacity-building. When his public posture becomes the subject of domestic polemics and partisan exchange, diplomatic presence has shifted from facilitation to distraction.
That outcome does not strengthen democracy; it diverts national attention away from self-directed governance and toward the words of a foreign official. In this respect, the writer’s defense inadvertently proves the point: productive diplomacy should make itself largely invisible in domestic political debate, not central to it.
The caricature of “ATM diplomacy” is similarly unhelpful. Respect for sovereignty does not demand silence, nor does partnership require public lecturing. Mature democracies conduct difficult discussions privately, institution-to-institution, not through public signaling those risks undermining confidence in domestic authority. This is why many Commonwealth states, Ghana included, have repeatedly resisted foreign diplomats inserting themselves into ongoing internal political debates, even while welcoming technical cooperation and observation.
The argument that investor confidence depends on such public interventions misunderstands how confidence is built. Investors do not look to diplomats as political referees. They look to predictable, autonomous institutions. Markets are unsettled not by constitutional disagreement, but by the appearance that domestic legitimacy requires external validation. A democracy that seems to need foreign prompting to perform its basic functions does not appear reassured, it appears weakened.
Nor does the invocation of extradition practices rescue the argument. Extradition occurs within formal treaty frameworks, judicial oversight, and state-to-state consent. It is not public political advocacy. Conflating structured legal cooperation with public diplomatic commentary on internal governance obscures rather than clarifies the issue.
Finally, dismissing concern for diplomatic boundaries as hypersensitivity or embarrassment is a category error. It is precisely confident, institutionally mature states that insist on these boundaries. Sovereignty is not opposed to democracy; it is the legal architecture that allows democracy to function without external pressure.
Guyana does not reject scrutiny, nor does it fear accountability. What it insists upon—rightly—is that democratic responsibility flows through its own constitutional mechanisms: Parliament, the courts, and independent commissions. Foreign partners strengthen democracy when they respect those channels, not when they bypass them.
Values matter. But so do rules. And in international relations, how values are advanced matters as much as which values are invoked.