Rodrigo Granda Affair

The Rodrigo Granda affair was an international incident that increased tension between Venezuela and Colombia between December 2004 and February 2005.

Events

On December 13, 2004, Rodrigo Granda, a member (the "foreign minister") of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia, or "FARC"), was kidnapped by individual Venezuelan officials in Caracas, Venezuela, and taken to Ccuta, Colombia (a departmental capital on the two nations' common border), where he was arrested by the Colombian authorities on December 14. Granda had been an (officially uninvited) attendant to the Second Bolivarian People's Congress in Caracas, an international gathering of supporters of the Bolivarian Revolution in Venezuela. Colombia admitted that it offered and paid a reward for Granda's capture, although it initially denied that he had been captured in Caracas and transported to Ccuta, only stating that he had been officially arrested by authorities in Ccuta. The FARC issued a statement claiming that the Venezuelan state should have protected Granda during his visit, and Granda's lawyer said that Granda held dual Venezuelan and Colombian citizenship. The Venezuelan interior ministry dismissed the FARC's claims, stated that Granda's Venezuelan identification card had been obtained through the use of forged documents and, in addition, that Venezuela had been unaware of Granda's visit and therefore had never decided for or against protecting him. Venezuelan authorities stated that their country would have cooperated with Colombian authorities through official channels, but rejected what they considered an undue violation of their sovereignity.

Diplomatic tensions

This event set off a series of diplomatic tensions, with Colombia questioning Venezuela's lack of cooperation in law enforcement actions against guerrillas in its territory, the United States supporting Colombia's position and outright accusing Venezuela of harboring these guerrillas, Venezuela accusing Colombia of violating its sovereignty, and the FARC accusing Venezuela of doing too little to protect its members. Venezuela demanded an apology from Colombia, recalled its ambassador for consultations, and suspended bilateral (government-to-government) commercial agreements. Individuals and enterprises in both countries suffered, but Colombian border regions were especially affected by the crisis. On February 15, 2005, Venezuelan President Hugo Chvez and Colombian President lvaro Uribe held a summit meeting that they both said resolved the diplomatic tensions. Both presidents stated that their nations and governments would henceforth avoid discussing similar issues through the media, and instead they would communicate directly through official diplomatic channels, in order to cooperate more effectively in matters of their mutual interest. They both credited Cuba, Peru, and Brazil for helping with mediation, while Chvez blamed the United States for precipitating the crisis and trying to prevent its resolution. Commercial relations and agreements were fully restored.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
killdozer (movie)
cypress microsystems
denver post
hooterville cannonball
new york air
cable (disambiguation)
australian monarchist alliance
boston social forum
joel stein
asper
splck
young avengers
slipware
intermud
beanland
quentin l. kopp
aemilius asper
vgmix
organ shoes
safi, malta
hans asper
dreamgirl: my life as a supreme
alexis callus
north sydney oval
duck (disambiguation)
moonie highway
girls preparatory school
alfred tsang
peter paul busuttil
malelane
c.m.s college
battle for mexico city
harsmar
sompur bihara
jupiter brain
cabin pressurization
dobutsuen mae station
white river, south africa
declarationism
claremont institute
huancavelica
beverly hills high school
riana
hazmat