Dear Editor,
As the International Court of Justice (ICJ) prepares to hear oral arguments in the Guyana-Venezuela border controversy starting May 4, 2026 the international community has witnessed a disturbing escalation of “symbolic aggression” by Venezuela’s Acting President, Delcy Rodríguez.
During recent official visits to CARICOM member states—first Grenada on April 9, and then Barbados on April 27—Ms. Rodríguez wore a brooch depicting a map of Venezuela that fraudulently includes Guyana’s Essequibo region. This was not an accident. It is a diplomatic provocation designed to normalize an illegal annexation claim while the matter is sub judice before the World Court.
She is testing the region’s resolve. By wearing this pin in front of Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell (Grenada) and Prime Minister Mia Mottley (Barbados), she is asking CARICOM to tolerate an attack on a founding member’s territorial integrity. Since Guyana is a Full Member of CARICOM, while Caracas is merely an observer with “acceding status,” Ms. Rodríguez appears to be attempting to coax CARICOM into silence—implying Venezuelan aggression can be normalized within our community without consequence.
To date, there is no public record of a formal complaint being filed by the Guyana Foreign Affairs Ministry or a CARICOM representative specifically regarding the brooch. Where is the cerebral or intestinal fortitude of our Guyanese CARICOM representative to address this fallacy? I must state, however, that our Guyana’s Private Sector Commission (PSC) and Aviation Operators Association of Guyana (AOAG) have vehemently condemned the act, calling it “theatrical aggression”. Furthermore, Guyana’s Minister of Local Government, Priya Manickchand, publicly rebuked CARICOM leaders for entertaining Rodríguez while she wore the pin, stating it makes her “question our friendships”. Thank you, Minister Ms. Priya Manickchand for having the testicular fortitude to highlight this deliberate provocation.
Publicly, CARICOM as a body has not issued a specific protest against this specific visit. While CARICOM heads reiterated “unwavering support” for Guyana at their July 2025 summit, the failure to immediately denounce a guest wearing an annexation map on official pins in our capitals is a dangerous silence. As the PSC warned, “Silence or inaction in the face of such deliberate provocation risks emboldening further escalation”.
Editor, this pin is not decorative jewelry; it is a claim to 160,000 square kilometers of Guyanese land. It violates the ICJ’s order for Venezuela to maintain the status quo.
If CARICOM hopes to remain relevant in defending the rule of law, it must speak with one voice to reject this farce immediately.