GEORGETOWN, Guyana (AP) A ship carrying five American oil workers is expected to touch shore in the coming hours after Venezuela intercepted the U.S.-chartered vessel in disputed waters off the coast of Guyana, a move that threatens to revive a decades-old territorial dispute between South America's biggest oil producer and one of the region's poorest nations.
The 285-foot survey research vessel, sailing under a Panamanian flag, was conducting a seismic study under contract for Anadarko Petroleum Corp. on Thursday when it was detained by an armed Venezuelan navy vessel and ordered to sail under escort to Margarita Island, which is part of Venezuela. Guyana said the crew was well within its territorial waters but that the Venezuelan navy told them they were operating in that country's exclusive economic zone and ordered an immediate halt to the survey.
Texas-based Anadarko said it was working with the governments of Guyana and the U.S. to secure the release of the crew and the vessel, which it expects to arrive Sunday to Margarita Island off of Venezuela's Caribbean coast.
Guyana's government on Saturday requested a meeting with Venezuelan officials next week to discuss the latest developments, which threaten to scare away much-needed foreign investment from the country.
"It was then clear that the vessel and its crew were not only being escorted out of Guyana's waters, but were under arrest," the Guyanese Foreign Ministry said in a statement Friday in which it demanded the immediate release of the vessel and its crew. "These actions by the Venezuelan naval vessel are unprecedented in Guyana-Venezuela relations."