Their Excellencies the Most Honourable Sir Patrick
Allen Governor General of Jamaica and the Most
Honourable Lady Allen
Bruce Golding Prime Minister of Jamaica and Chairman
of the Conference of Heads of Government of the
Caribbean Community
Your Excellencies Bharrat Jagdeo, President of the
Republic of Guyana and Rene Preval President of the
Republic of Haiti
Other Distinguished Heads of Government of the
Caribbean Community
Your Excellency Ban Ki-Moon, Secretary-General of
the United Nations
Your Excellency Jose Miguel Insulza,
Secretary-General of the Organisation of American
States (OAS)
Honourable Ministers High Officials of the
Government of Jamaica
The Acting President of the Caribbean Court of
Justice
Your Excellencies the Ambassadors Accredited to the
Caribbean Community and other Members of the
Diplomatic Corps
Heads of Regional Institutions and Representatives
of International Organisations
Special Representative of the Heads of Government on
Haiti and former Prime Minister of Jamaica, the Most
Honourable Percival J. Patterson
Distinguished Delegates
Deputy Secretary-General and other Members of Staff
of the CARICOM Secretariat
Specially invited guests
Representatives of the Media
Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen
Today the 4th of July 2010 – on the 37th
Anniversary of the signing of the Treaty of
Chaguaramas, establishing the Caribbean Community (CARICOM),
it is my pleasure and honour to welcome you all to
this Opening Ceremony of the Thirty-First Regular
Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of
the Caribbean Community.
Some sixty-three years ago, in 1947, political,
labour and civil society leaders of the then British
West Indian Colonies, gathered together here in
Montego Bay to discuss the prospects for closer
association among those territories. Today, the
heirs to and guardians of that legacy, have returned
with others to this virtual cradle of West Indian
unity to continue to pursue that self-same objective
– closer co-operation and integration of the
countries of the Caribbean Region. As we embark on
the second decade of the new millennium, we are
armed with the experience gained from various
efforts in that regard - and there have been many -
over the six decades since that historic initial
effort.
The signing of the Treaty at Chaguaramas, a small
historic sea port in Trinidad and Tobago, on this
date 4 July 1973 was in honour of the birth date of
that outstanding regionalist, the Jamaican leader
Norman Washington Manley.
Today, I welcome and congratulate another
Jamaican leader, the Honourable Bruce Golding, Prime
Minister of Jamaica, on his assumption of the office
of Chairman of the Caribbean Community at a most
critical juncture in the life of the Community.
I look forward, through his leadership, to
Jamaica’s continued pivotal role in the further
development of our Community. In a similar vein, I
must express appreciation to the immediate past
Chairman, the Honourable Roosevelt Skerrit, the
Prime Minister of Dominica, whose stewardship during
the previous six months was marked by his remarkable
steadfastness in the face of the unprecedented
disaster wrought on CARICOM’s newest Member State,
Haiti, by the devastating earthquake of 12 January.
I thank you, Prime Minister Skerrit, on behalf of
the Community and in particular, ob behalf of the
people of Haiti. Later in this ceremony, the
Community will, through your thoughtful gesture,
show its appreciation to all those, who gave
medical, military and logistic service unstintingly
and sacrificed for the people of Haiti in those
early frightful and awful moments following the
events of January 12.
Excellencies, distinguished guests, ladies and
gentlemen, I have a particular pleasure in extending
an especially warm welcome to the newest member of
the Conference, the Honourable Kamla
Persad-Bissessar, the Prime Minister of Trinidad and
Tobago, who I have been assured is no stranger to
Jamaica.
Madame Prime Minister, in congratulating you on
your recent victory at the polls, I am sure I speak
for your colleague Heads of Government and the
people of the Community in general, when I say that
we look forward to the fresh perspectives you would
be bringing to the integration process, as you join
your colleague Heads of Government in giving the
process the added impetus it needs. Welcome
Honourable Prime Minister!
Even as we extend a special welcome to the
Honourable Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, do
permit me to express, on behalf of us all, best
wishes for a full and speedy recovery of the Prime
Minister of Barbados, the Honourable David Thompson
and our fervent hopes for his early return to this
august body.
Excellencies, Ministers, Distinguished Delegates,
Esteemed Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen, the impetus
to which I referred earlier, will provide the
invigoration that our Community needs, first to
confront and then to overcome the formidable
challenges which have been a feature of the first
decade of this 21st century. The energy crisis, the
food crisis, the financial and economic crisis, the
crisis resulting from the effects of climate change
have all had and continue to have serious adverse
impacts on all our countries. Further, on 12 January
this year, our newest Member State, Haiti, suffered
a most devastating disaster through a catastrophic
earthquake which killed hundreds of thousands,
rendered more than a million homeless and
significantly damaged its physical infrastructure.
In the face of such adversity, our Caribbean
Community has however, not allowed the demons of
despair to hold full sway. Instead, perhaps due to
those six decades of experience and the benefit of
37 years of a formalised common purpose, this
Community has moved to combat the effects of these
crises, by together working toward solutions for the
whole, which would benefit the individual parts.
If any lesson needed to be learnt regarding the
imperative of regional inregration, this last decade
has reinforced it. It is one in which the most
powerful nations in the world meeting in fora such
as G8 and the G20, have been seeking to forge a
common front to stave off the worst effects of these
crises. Who are we to do less? Indeed what we need
is more, not less regional unity. We should not
underestimate the value of our 37 years as a
Community – making it the longest surviving
integration movement among developing countries.
Excellencies, Heads of Government, Distinguished
Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen, the pre-eminent reason
for our unity must not be cast in the mould of
simply battling adversity, nor in the nostalgia of a
shared history, instead, it must be in the
collective responsibility and prospects for the
future well-being of the people of these small
vulnerable nation states, who live cheek by jowl
around the Caribbean Sea.
However, this is also no time for absolution by
history. The youth of our Caribbean civilisation may
have jolted us by their forthright approach at the
Youth Summit in Paramaribo, Suriname in January
2010. But it is their livelihood and their lives
that are at stake. They want a Caribbean home in
which they can roam from room to room without let,
or hindrance in seeking the best one in which to lay
their heads. They are eager for the CARICOM Single
Market and Economy to be fully implemented. They
want it to be a lived experience. We have to do our
best to make their dreams possible in this, the
Region of their birth.
In meeting that challenge, our Community would
also be giving itself an opportunity to harness its
best talents in its efforts to create space in a
world that remains implacably hostile to the
interests of small states. It is those talents which
reside in our youth that can give us the
invigoration and the innovation and creativity
necessary to be competitive in the global market
place. And it is that drive for competitiveness
which would generate the excellence needed to build
the kind of Community for which we all yearn.
Excellencies, Honourable Ministers, Distinguished
Delegates, Ladies and Gentlemen, the task is not
beyond us. The people of our Community continue to
be resilient and resourceful and aided by a vibrant
Caribbean diaspora, this Region can only prosper. In
many ways we can punch above our weight and we
certainly believe that despite our challenges, we
can achieve the objectives of the Revised Treaty of
Chaguaramas and most, if not all, of the Millennium
Development Goals. What is needed is the guidance
and leadership that will channel our energies to
achieve the optimal result - a viable, prosperous
and secure Community for All.
And that is the premier challenge that faces this
Thirty-First Meeting of the Conference of Heads of
Government of the Caribbean Community. In that
regard, we have the unique pleasure and are deeply
honoured and highly fortunate to have with us, to
assist us in meeting this challenge and to help the
Region to secure its place in the contemporary
world, the distinguished Secretary-General of the
United Nations His Excellency Ban Ki-moon.
Secretary-General, I thank you for honouring your
commitment to me of January 12 and for this historic
participation by a Secretary-General of the United
Nations in the deliberations of the Regular Meeting
of the Conference of Heads of Government of the
Caribbean Community.
It is also my pleasure to welcome, once again, to
a Meeting of our Heads of Government, the
distinguished Secretary-General of the Organisation
of American States, His Excellency Jose Miguel
Insulza. We look forward to his usual insightful
contribution to our efforts in confronting the
challenges that face us.
Tomorrow, we also expect to be joined by the
Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF), Mr Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Their
contributions like those of the President of the
World Bank, Mr Robert Zoellick and the President of
the Inter-American Development Bank, Mr Luis Alberto
Moreno at our Inter-Sessional Meeting in Dominica
last March, for all of which we are deeply
appreciative as the Community seeks to find its true
place in the Contemporary world.
Against that background and given the excellence
of the arrangements and the generous hospitality
which the Government and People of Jamaica have
provided for this meeting, I find no difficulty in
believing that challenges will be met.
I thank you!