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The nine Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries
that will host matches for Cricket World Cup (CWC)
2007 are on track to achieve security goals in time
for the March 2007 start of the world’s third
largest sporting event.
“Most countries are into the stage where they’re
starting to look at how they are going to do
simulations and table top exercises and actually
work those plans that they have come up with in the
past year or so, and how they are actually going to
work out in real time. So that’s the general state
of the Region… at the moment,” said Colonel Antony
Anderson, Regional Operations Commander, the CARICOM
Operational Planning and Coordinating Staff (COPACS)
in Georgetown on 15 December.
Colonel Anderson and his team were in Guyana for
a series of meetings with a national team of
security planners, command staff and logistic
elements headed by Guyana's Minister of Home
Affairs, the Honourable Clement Rohee. Colonel
Anderson was among officials who briefed the media
on Friday 15. The others were Home Affairs Minister,
Commissioner of Police Mr. Henry Greene, and
Assistant Commissioner of Police, Mr. Paul Slowe,
who is spearheading security arrangements for
Guyana’s leg of the tournament.
Established by the CARICOM Heads of Government at
their meeting in July 2006 in St. Kitts and Nevis,
COPACS' function is to secure the Region for CWC
2007. In this regard Colonel Anderson and his team
by the end of January 2007, will complete visit to
all the hosting matches for the tournament.
Among COPACS' mandates are to provide and
coordinate the Region's assets to assist deficient
countries which are hosting the matches, and to
ensure common standards across the Region. With the
Single Domestic Space created for CWC 2007, one
country is dependent on the other to secure its
borders.
“Everyone in the process would like to know that
what is happening in another country will
sufficiently protect them from any of the things
that they would normally protect themselves from,”
said Colonel Anderson.
He added that one of the first things his team
looks for in its visits to the host countries is
whether there is an understanding of the magnitude
and scale of the event. In addition to creating an
environment that will encourage visitors to enjoy
what the Caribbean has to offer, those countries
must also put measures in place to deal with
“hostile persons with criminal intent”.
“It is of course the balance of these two things
that will make for a successful regional and
national approach to this tournament,” Colonel
Anderson said.
Though work varies from state to state, countries
are well advanced in their security preparations.
Mr. Slowe pointed out that every aspect of the
tournament had a security component and indicated
that Guyana was at the point where it was conducting
training exercises for security personnel of both
the private and public sectors, seeking specialist
assistance and preparing for two cricket matches to
test its preparedness. Commissioner Greene said
discussions with Colonel Anderson included forms of
assistance with regard to a bomb disposal unit, as
well as help to deal with hazardous material.
With regard to garnering international assistance
to achieve security goals, Colonel Anderson said
that letters have been exchanged between CARICOM and
Brazil and there have been meetings with Regional
Diplomats and at the Resource Mobilisation Committee
level. There is a CARICOM Resource Mobilisation
Committee on Cricket headed by Minister of National
Security in Jamaica, Dr. Peter Phillips. That
Committee is coordinating with a UK-based team which
has experience from the Athens Olympics. Together,
Colonel Anderson said, they will consider
approaching the international community for assets
and/or assistance for foreign engagements in the
Region.
“Once that sort of asset is donated or available
to us, then it’s our job to see how we coordinate
that and fit that in with the overall security
architecture that we are trying to develop,” Colonel
Anderson said.
CONTACT: Rose Blenman
rblenman@caricom.org
piu@caricom.org
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