It is my pleasure, as Secretary-General of the
Caribbean Community, to be in Antigua and Barbuda
and to join in greeting you all on behalf of the
Caribbean Community Secretariat and indeed of the
entire Community.
This meeting comes at a very hectic period for me
and the Secretariat, as we are in the process of
preparing for the 31st Meeting of the Conference of
Heads of Government, which takes place in Montego
Bay, Jamaica in just over a week’s time from 4th to
7th July.
We have been preoccupied with efforts towards the
reconstruction of Haiti. There have also been a
number of other meetings that have engaged the
Secretariat and our Governments within the past few
weeks, including the special meeting with the US
Secretary of State Hilary Clinton in Barbados, the
Joint CARICOM/US Forum on the Caribbean Basin
Security Initiative in Washington DC, and my own
briefing with the new Prime Minister of Trinidad and
Tobago, the Hon. Kamla Persad Bissessar who now
assumes the portfolio of Lead Head of Government for
Crime and Security in the Quasi-Cabinet of the
Caribbean Community.
Hon. Ministers, distinguished delegates, ladies
and gentlemen, the Community has accorded a very
important role to the issue of crime and security.
It is for this reason that Security has been
elevated to being the fourth pillar of the Community
alongside trade and economic integration, foreign
and community relations and functional cooperation.
Consequently, this brings increased importance and
challenges to this Council to streamline the crime
and security programmes and to make the new
management structure for crime and security function
more effectively.
The discussions in which we are engaged at this
10th CONSLE are most important. They are intended to
help us to focus on several operational matters for
which critical and concrete decisions can no longer
be delayed. Among these are how to strengthen the
interface between the regional and national crime
and security programmes and in what ways are the
programmes from the coordinating and implementation
agencies such as IMPACS and SEPACS to be
streamlined, to guarantee a safe and secure regional
environment.
In this regard it is important to recognise that
the legacies of Cricket World Cup 2007 such as the
introduction of the advanced passenger information
system, and the operations of the single domestic
space, are important features on which we must build
the viability of our regional integration movement.
These legacies among others facilitated a common
visa policy and free movement of persons and
demonstrated the benefits of pursuing common
policies. Indeed the CWC 2007 legacies illustrate
the best features of functional cooperation. They
contribute to the economic viability of our Region
by underpinning the sustainability of the CARICOM
Single Market arrangements.
In that context, I look forward to the
discussions on the operational guidelines, the
concerns and the financial options for the
implementation of the CARICOM Travel Pass project (CARIPASS)
which offers a very exciting prospect for utilising
the newer information technologies to facilitate
easier passage of CARICOM nationals through the
immigration process, while at the same time offering
to make our borders much more secure by providing
comprehensive checks and balances. The prospects are
awesome. While other countries like the UK,
Singapore, Canada and the Cayman Islands have put in
place various electronic devices that contribute
toward radically revamping their immigration
processes, none so far, has had to face the
challenge of operating a cross border system among
as many as 12 sovereign States that form part of the
Caribbean Community. I therefore expect a very
robust debate on this issue.
We are also confronted with the results of the
recently concluded Caribbean - United States
Security Cooperation Co-operation Dialogue, as set
out in the Declaration of Principles which emanated
from that dialogue and which provides a valuable
launching pad for consolidating the relationship
with the USA on a series of mutually beneficial
security activities.
Two issues in the cooperation with the US that
resonate are human safety and social justice. It is
significant that these two features form an
essential basis for the links between the CARICOM
Secretariat, as a coordinating organisation for the
Community, and IMPACS as an implementing agency. It
is for this reason that the current project with
UNODC for crime prevention which includes reducing
the demand for illicit drugs, will prove to be
pivotal in mainstreaming crime prevention into human
and social programmes such as health, education,
youth, culture and gender, as well as the
justification for budgetary allocations to
facilitate these developments.
Hence the reason today for the Agenda Item that
addresses the need for the establishment and
implementation of a Regional Resource Mobilisation
Framework for crime and security. That structure
must provide an opportunity for helping the Region
to define its priorities more concretely and to lay
the foundations for creating sustainable
partnerships, to implement an agenda that must
include institutional strengthening, capacity
building, border security and enhanced information
and communication systems.
In the final analysis the outcomes from the
deliberations at this meeting must place emphasis on
making our CARICOM Single Market a zone of peace,
one that would, among other things, continue to
attract visitors to our shores and one that
demonstrates to the world what can be achieved by
small countries working together, to be competitive
in the global arena. Mr. Chairman, Hon. Ministers,
distinguished delegates, ladies and gentlemen, our
people expect us to secure their future. Let us
therefore take on the challenge and make this
Caribbean Community a safer and thus a better place,
not only for all its citizens, but for all who dwell
therein.
I thank you.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org