Madam Chair, although the protocol has already
been established, please permit me to recognize His
Excellency, the Most Honourable Sir Patrick Allen,
the Governor General of Jamaica and Lady Allen, our
distinguished Host and Chairman of CARICOM
Honourable Bruce Golding, our Distinguished and
Honoured Guests especially those who have travelled
from overseas, friends, Ladies and Gentlemen.
Esteemed Colleagues: Conferring, planning, and
working with you on matters of import to our Region
has always been a source of great collaborative
energy and productivity. As a result, these Heads of
Government meetings have always represented highly
valued opportunities for shared insights and
analyses. In light of this, therefore, I am
especially pleased – and grateful - that the people
of St. Kitts and Nevis, on January 25th of this
year, very warmly arranged for my now-15 year
collaboration with you, as CARICOM Heads of
Government, to continue.
Since our last meeting, of course, the people of
Montserrat and the people of Trinidad and Tobago and
Suriname have been to the polls as well, and so I
take this opportunity to once again to express, on
behalf of the Government and people of St.
Kitts-Nevis, and also on my own behalf, sincere
congratulations and best wishes to the Honorable
Reuben Meade, Honourable Hubert Hughes, Honourable
W. Mckeeva Bush, Chief Ministers of Montserrat,
Anguilla and the Cayman Islands respectively and the
Honorable Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Prime Minister of
Trinidad and Tobago. I know that we all wish you,
your Governments, and the people you now lead, the
very best.
Honourable Colleagues: When we entered the
political arena, whenever each of us individually
may have entered the political arena, we knew that
we would face a plethora of economic, social and
cultural challenges - if we were ever granted the
opportunity to lead our respective islands and/or
nations. That is why we sought elected office, after
all – to solve problems….to leave our countries
better than we found them…..
Today, however, I am certain that all of us in
this room, like Heads of Government the world over,
would agree that we are now facing challenges that
are vaster in scope, more demanding in complexity,
and more varied in their respective component parts
than any Head of Government, anywhere in the world,
could have predicted just one decade ago.
It is at times like these, then, when the resolve
of our leadership, the resolve of our people and
Governments are tested. It is at times like these,
then, that our collective efforts as people within
our countries, as varying sectors within our
countries and as countries within this beloved
Caribbean Community of ours must be brought to bear.
It is at times like these, then, that we must
understand that the difficulty of the task at hand
requires a sustained commitment, as building our
Community is a never ending task.
There is no denying that we, in the Caribbean,
now find ourselves in what might best be described
as several “tight spots” - most of them not of our
making. But that, at this point, is irrelevant.
The moment demands that we now use all tangible
and intangible resources within our reach to
extricate ourselves, and that we do so via the
formulation of corrective, and I believe
importantly, collective action and policies at this
most pivotal moment in human – and Caribbean -
history.
Our “tight spots” are by no means
inconsequential. Indeed, they have been wreaking
havoc with nations far more powerful than ours. We,
nonetheless, must be resolute in our efforts to (i)
anticipate the implications of these global crises,
(ii) insulate our countries and region, to the best
of our abilities, from the associated fallout, and
(iii) educate our people on the responsibilities
that we must now all shoulder – Governments, private
sectors, Churches, NGO’s, and ordinary civilians
alike – in the interest of self-preservation.
Esteemed Colleagues, we all agree that this
increasingly interconnected world has its advantages
– but it certainly has its costs as well:
- The global economic crisis was not of our
making, but it is now very much our problem.
- Global climate change, also not of our
making, is now of supreme relevance to us,
located as we are, between the Tropic of Cancer
and the Tropic of Capricorn - with all that,
that implies in terms of altered weather
patterns, and their attendant socio-economic
consequences.
- The unthinkable catastrophe in the Gulf
cannot be charged to either our policies or our
actions, yet it is already of profound and
immediate concern to certain CARICOM member
states. Indeed, though of currently
indeterminate immediate impact where the rest of
us are concerned, this catastrophe will,
ultimately, have ramifications for us all.
- The global disintegration of traditional
cultures was not instigated by us, yet it has
grave implications for our region, as is now
evident in the very “un-Caribbean-like”
attitudes and behaviors that have crept into the
region, and the attendant increases in violence
and criminality with which we must now contend.
My very own country of St. Kitts and Nevis has
not escaped the wrath of this great challenge,
however I have not been daunted. Today I say to
my colleagues, especially those we are welcoming
at this 31st Regular meeting that you too must
never become daunted.
I have had the distinct honour of being a member
of this forum for the last fifteen years. In fact
today makes it exactly 15 years since I have been
Prime Minister of St. Kitts and Nevis and my party’s
victory of January 25, 2010 marked the start of the
fourth Consecutive time of my Prime Ministership and
the St. Kitts and Nevis Labour Government. I have
experienced some of our greatest challenges but I
have seen very significant achievements in response
to these challenges.
Distinguished Heads of Caribbean Governments,
Ladies and Gentlemen during my sojourn as a leader
within this Community we have together made
significant steps forward.
It should never be underestimated, the privileges
we have given to our Caribbean people and businesses
to venture out into our different Caribbean islands
under the free movement of people and of capital
within the context of the CSME. It should never be
underestimated, the framework that we have put in
place to ensure that our interests are best served
in external trade negotiations through the relevant
Prime Ministerial Subcommittee and the CRNM. It
should never be underestimated, the many benefits
that can be derived from our coordinated approach to
regional health issues of a global and epidemic
nature within the context of our regional health
policy.
In this regard our focused initiatives through
Caribbean Cooperation in Health, PANCAP and the now
Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA), at
mitigating the effects of HIV/AIDS and chronic
non-communicable diseases must be celebrated.
Lastly, we must never underestimate how well we
have done at keeping the University of the West
Indies as the centre of our regions education
strategy. Its expansion into several spheres, but
especially the Open Campus establishment and the
great numbers of our Caribbean people that it
continues to educate must be celebrated.
These are significant achievements that we have
attained together and it’s these outstanding
achievements that give me faith and confidence in
our collective commitment. These successes are what
give me equal faith that we will rise above the
challenges our countries now face as long as we
continue to work seriously together.
It is very important for me as we move forward to
remind us all that there is a very sterling example
of greater cooperation right in our midst. On 19th
June a significant statement was made when the Heads
of Government of the OECS territories signed the
Revised Treaty of Basseterre establishing the OECS
Economic Union. This great stride made at the
sub-regional level of the Organisation of the
Eastern Caribbean States must be seen in the context
of the wider integration movement and we should not
as the Caribbean Community hesitate to use this
model as instruction to us in this integration
movement onward and forward.
In closing I wish to thank, profoundly those who
have served us in the past, their work has been well
received and engenders the platform on which we must
now develop and advance. I give an equally profound
thank you to the Secretariat who continues to work
diligently as the implementation agency of the
Community. An even more profound thank you is
reserved for the Caribbean peoples we serve for
their vote of confidence in our leadership, for
their patience and for their insistence on demanding
only the best from their leaders.
It is, indeed, a signal honour for us to be the
elected leaders of the Caribbean Community in 2010.
We must remember however that attending to the
fierce challenges we face, Fellow Heads of
Government, Ladies and Gentlemen, will demand
sacrifice by all….self-restraint by all…courage and
sobriety by all. And any people’s ability and
willingness to meet these types of challenges is
directly related to the strength and stability of
that people’s culture. Caribbean values have
equipped our people to rise to history’s challenges
before.
Therefore through a renewed and sustained
emphasis on traditional standards and behaviours
that elevate and empower, let us equip our Region,
not only to meet our current challenges, but indeed
to re-assert and re-claim our Caribbean identity,
and in the process, equip ourselves to meet
challenges life – and Fate – may bring.
Thank you!