WE, the Heads of Government of the Caribbean
Community (CARICOM), meeting at Needham’s Point,
Barbados, 1-4 July, 2007 on the occasion of the 28th
Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of
Government of CARICOM;
Determined that the goal of our regional
integration process is, first and foremost, to
enhance the well-being of all of the citizens of our
countries;
Recalling the 1989 Declaration of Grand
Anse in which we recognised the deepening of the
regional integration process as critical to the
Community’s ability to respond to the challenges and
opportunities presented by the changes in the global
economy;
Having signed the 2001 Revised Treaty of
Chaguaramas, which established the CARICOM Single
Market and Economy (CSME), and, so doing, giving
impetus to the creation of new institutional
arrangements designed to implement the provisions
thereof;
Reaffirming Article 6 (i) of the Revised
Treaty of Chaguaramas, which identifies enhanced
functional cooperation as one of the fundamental
objectives of our Community;
Recalling the immense contribution that
functional cooperation has made so far to the
regional integration movement and that these
purposeful, collaborative, coordinated actions have
yielded significant and tangible benefits to the
people of the Community, especially in areas such as
education, health, sport, culture, sustainable
development and security;
Recognising the shortages of skills in key
areas, occasioned by continuous migration and the
negative effect this poses for development;
Determined also to ensure the equitable
distribution among the peoples of CARICOM of the
gains realised specifically through the
implementation of the CARICOM Single Market and
Economy (CSME) and generally through the regional
integration process;
Fully convinced that functional
cooperation, conceived as the body of actions and
activities that integrate the Community’s political,
economic, security and social policy goals with its
cultural, scientific, technological and
environmental objectives, offers great opportunities
for the future and therefore must permeate the work
of every council and institution of the Community
and in this regard, contribute to the increase in
the welfare and security of the Community’s
citizens;
DECLARE:
1. That improvement of the quality of life of
CARICOM citizens is the paramount objective of our
Region’s integration process;
2. Our determination to make functional
cooperation a priority within the Community as one
of the principal means by which the benefits of the
integration movement are distributed through the
length and breadth of the Community, including its
Associate Members, and among all its peoples,
thereby engendering a “Community for All”;
3. That we will achieve this objective primarily
using regional institutions, organisations and other
entities whose mandates support our efforts and in
this regard, pay specific attention to strengthening
the capacity of the CARICOM Secretariat and in
particular its legal division;
4. Our commitment to take action, at the national
level, in support of regional cooperation,
particularly through the establishment of
appropriate complementary mechanisms
5. That the Task Force to review the status of
functional cooperation should be constituted as soon
as possible and provide a full report, through the
Community Council, to the next meeting of the
Conference;
6. That we mandate, in this regard, a
comprehensive review of regional institutions with a
view effectively to rationalising their functions,
funding and structures better to provide common
services and coordination of national policies and
programmes within the Community;
7. That we will pursue these objectives, as a
priority, in the areas outlined below and review, on
a regular basis, the progress achieved.
With regard to
8. Health – ‘The Health of the Region is the
Wealth of the Region’
Recalling the Nassau Declaration on Health, which
stated, inter alia, that ‘the health of the region
is the wealth of the region’, as well as the
recommendations of the Caribbean Commission on
Health and Development,
We:
Emphasise the intrinsic and instrumental value of
the health of our people;
Agree to establish the areas of functional
cooperation to enable health to contribute to the
other fundamental objectives of the Treaty of
Chaguaramas, utilising our regional health
institutions and partner agencies;
Commit ourselves to working towards creating the
conditions for equitable access, by every Community
citizen, to adequate health care in each CARICOM
Member State.
9. Human and Social Development
Appreciating that the effective development and
deployment of our skilled human resources are
critical to the achievement of competitiveness and
our economic objectives and confident that social
development is a precondition for sustainable
prosperity,
We:
With regard to –
(i) Social Welfare
Commit ourselves to establishing effective
modalities to ensure the portability of pensions and
other social security benefits for our citizens as
they move across the Community;
(ii) Culture
Recognise the central role of culture in forging
regional identity and in this regard are determined
to foster greater collaboration among national
cultural entities and ensure that CARIFESTA plays
its critical role in developing the region’s
cultural industries;
(iii) Education and training
Commit ourselves to working towards creating the
conditions for equitable access for every CARICOM
citizen to the necessary education and training that
will allow them to realise their full potential as
productive and creative members of our society;
Acknowledge the potential of information and
communication technologies to support distance
education initiatives and, in that context, continue
to support the CARICOM Knowledge Learning Network (CKLN)
which will assist in providing the infrastructure
necessary to amplify the broad educational
opportunities for our citizens;
Also welcome the imminent introduction of the
Caribbean Vocational Qualification which will
provide a credible, fair and transparent assessment
of skills and competencies of Community nationals as
they move and work within the region;
(iv) Labour
Welcome the new employment opportunities which
have arisen from the establishment of the Single
Market and Single Economy and reaffirm our
determination to increase them further;
Agree, in this regard, to work towards the
creation of regional labour market information
systems to facilitate the identification of
employment opportunities across the region;
Also agree that where appropriate, the skills and
experience of retired citizens of the community and
members of the Caribbean Diaspora be tapped and made
available for the region’s development.
(v) Youth and Development
Acknowledge the importance of the Caribbean
Commission on Youth and Development in helping
to chart a strategic vision and action programme
for the empowerment of our youth.
10. Communication – “Bridging the Divide”
Recognising that the establishment of efficient
communication links is critical to community
building and is a prerequisite for the unfettered
movement of information, goods and people throughout
the region.
We:
With regard to-
Transportation
Resolve to develop and implement a regional air
and maritime transportation policy designed to
create affordable, reliable and safe intra-regional
transportation services;
Information and communication technology
Stress the importance of adopting a coordinated
approach to the development of and access to
information and communication technologies and
networks by the populations of the region as a means
of achieving greater social cohesion and as a
platform for further economic development and
participation in the global economy;
Telecommunications
Resolve to establish a framework for the
coordination of telecommunications policy and to
develop within the Community a single domestic space
for telecommunications.
Public Education
Commit ourselves to intensify public education
with a view to further involving citizens of the
region in the integration process.
11. Crime and security – ‘Securing our
Community’
Aware that the security of our people is our
highest responsibility and deeply committed to
reducing vulnerability to crime and other threats to
security within national borders and in our shared
economic space, as well as to those emanating from
beyond,
We:
Agree to build on the security arrangements
successfully implemented for Cricket World Cup 2007
in order to enhance the well-being of the region’s
citizens and preserve the safety and security of our
countries;
Further agree to accelerate the process of
intelligence-sharing and human resource development
and to develop other relevant bilateral and
multilateral security arrangements to supplement
limited national resources;
Resolve to develop regional law enforcement
instruments which will facilitate a coordinated
approach to the scourge of organised crime,
international terrorism and financial crimes.
12. Environment –“Preserving and Protecting
our Patrimony”
Convinced that the quality of life of our people
and the sustainable development of our countries are
reliant upon the conservation and protection of our
natural environment and the maintenance of our
precious biodiversity,
We:
With regard to-
Climate change
Fully support the Caribbean Community Climate
Change Centre (CCCCC), a recognised Centre of
Excellence, in pursuit of its mandate to coordinate
the region’s response and adaptation to climate
change, which constitutes a real threat to the
viability of our states;
Disasters
Welcome the imminent establishment of the
Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency,
which is to replace CDERA, as a critical institution
for mitigating the impact of natural and man-made
disasters on our Member States within the broader
framework of the region’s sustainable development
agenda;
Caribbean Sea
Reiterate our support to the initiative to have
the Caribbean Sea recognised as a Special Area in
the context of sustainable development so as to
protect and preserve this essential and vulnerable
shared natural resource.
13. Energy
Recognising the necessity of a sustainable,
stable and affordable supply of energy for the
development of our societies,
We:
Support the work of the Caribbean Renewable
Energy Development Programme in the implementation
of its mandate and give urgency to the development
of renewable energy options to reduce the region’s
dependence on fossil fuels;
Agree to complete the elaboration of a regional
energy policy which will address, among others,
issues relating to cost, sustainability and security
of supply, bearing in mind the special role of
CARICOM net energy-exporting countries;
Instruct the Ministers responsible for Energy
urgently to meet in order to address these and other
energy-related issues and report, through the
Community Council, to the next meeting of the
Conference.
14. Agriculture
Underlining the significance of agriculture, not
just as an economic sector, but as an expression of
a distinctive Caribbean way of life,
We:
Reaffirm our commitment to realising the
objectives of the Jagdeo Initiative which seeks to
revitalise the agriculture sectors and stimulate
entrepreneurial capacity among the agricultural
communities across the region.
15. WE PLEDGE, THEREFORE, TO INVEST IN
FUNCTIONAL COOPERATION FOR THE FURTHER DEVELOPMENT
OF OUR REGION’S HUMAN AND SOCIAL CAPITAL, WHOSE
GREATEST DIVIDEND IS THE CREATION OF A COMMUNITY FOR
ALL.