GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Tensions within CARICOM have escalated after Venezuela’s acting president, Delcy Rodríguez, visited Grenada and Barbados, drawing criticism from Guyanese officials and exposing fresh fractures in the regional bloc.
Guyanese Education Minister Priya Manickchand publicly questioned CARICOM’s solidarity in a social media post, highlighting concern over Caribbean leaders meeting Venezuelan officials while Guyana remains embroiled in a territorial dispute with Caracas over the Essequibo region.
The dispute, currently before the International Court of Justice, centers on Essequibo, a resource-rich territory constituting roughly two-thirds of Guyana’s landmass. For Guyana, symbolic gestures such as Rodríguez’s visits to other Caribbean nations carry heightened political significance.
Diverging National Interests Expose CARICOM Rift
The controversy underscores the challenge CARICOM faces in balancing collective unity with the independent foreign policy and economic priorities of its members.
Grenada and Barbados maintain bilateral relationships that include trade, energy, and development opportunities, yet their engagement with Venezuela has reignited concerns in Guyana over whether the bloc’s public support aligns with the actual conduct of member states.
While CARICOM has repeatedly affirmed its backing for Guyana’s sovereignty and peaceful legal resolution, the recent visits have raised questions about how solidarity is reflected in practice.
Regional Leadership Under Scrutiny
The ongoing rift also casts a spotlight on Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s recent criticism of CARICOM leadership and governance, echoing broader concerns about CARICOM’s ongoing dysfunction. Persad-Bissessar has voiced concerns over the bloc’s consistency in managing regional issues, and the current dispute reinforces the perception that CARICOM faces internal strains at a time when coordinated action is critical.
For citizens across the Caribbean, these divisions have tangible implications. CARICOM cooperation affects trade, security coordination, disaster response, migration policy, and the region’s global influence.
As geopolitical pressures grow and member states pursue competing interests, CARICOM leaders face the urgent task of resolving disagreements such as this one while preserving confidence in the bloc’s cohesion and purpose.





























