(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) At the second CARICOM-Japan Ministerial
Meeting held in Tokyo, Japan on 2 September 2010,
CARICOM Member States and Japan agreed on a range of
issues for strengthening the partnership and
collaboration which they have enjoyed over the past
ten years.
In a comprehensive Outcome Document adopted by
the Meeting, the Foreign Ministers identified the
issues of overcoming vulnerability, climate change,
poverty alleviation, capacity building and cultural
exchange as areas for strengthened cooperation.
Additionally, the Community commended Japan for its
ongoing support to Haiti over the years, and
particularly for its immediate response to Haiti
through its pledge of US$100M for reconstruction
activities as well as its intention for further
assistance to Haiti in the medium and long term
recovery of that country.
The four-point Agenda of the Japan-CARICOM
Cooperation Initiative provides Member States with
the opportunity to implement projects in the areas
of disaster risk reduction, adaptation to the
effects of Climate Change, management, human
resource development, waste management, and
alternative sources of energy.
It was agreed that the future direction of
CARICOM- Japan cooperation will also place emphasis
on the promotion of human security through
assistance to the improvements in primary and
secondary education as a well as health and medical
systems. It will also focus on fostering cultural
exchange and the promotion of cultural industries
which would involve invitations to 300 young leaders
from CARICOM Member States to visit Japan over the
next three years.
Health and Medicine represent another important
area which Japan has identified for continued
technical assistance within the revised CARICOM-Japan
Framework. In this regard, CARICOM Foreign Ministers
took the opportunity to thank Japan for its support
to the UN Resolution on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs),
a CARICOM-led initiative, and proposed this
critically important issue as one of the specific
issues for future collaboration in the area of
health care.
In a joint CARICOM/OECS Secretariat bilateral
meeting held in the margins of the Ministerial
Meeting with H.E. Shuji Kira, Parliamentary
Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs, Dr. Edward
Greene, Assistant Secretary-General, Human and
Social Development of the CARICOM Secretariat
reiterated CARICOM’s willingness to work with Japan
towards achieving a successful outcome on Climate
Change at COP 16 in Cancun, Mexico and emphasized
the Community’s interest in collaborating with the
Government and the private sector of Japan in the
development of cultural industries, and building on
people to people exchanges which the two sides
enjoy.
In his introductory remarks to the Ministerial
session, Dr The Hon Kenneth Baugh, Minister of
Foreign Affairs and Deputy Prime Minister of Jamaica
as CARICOM Co-Chair, outlined the challenges facing
the Region, many of which, he stated had been
exacerbated by the global financial and economic
crisis. He also pointed the need for special
consideration to be given to the peculiarities of
the Highly Indebted Middle Income Countries (HIMICS)
which have particular vulnerabilities, including the
persistent exposure to natural disasters. He urged
the Japanese Government to highlight these issues
and commit to advocating on CARICOM’s behalf in the
G20 Forum where Japan has global influence.
The Ministerial dialogue which was hailed as
“meaningful and constructive,” was followed by a
Public Symposium on Climate Change and Bio-Diversity
organized by the United Nations University. In
presentations on a range of themes spanning
Caribbean Culture and Society, Biodiversity and
Marine Governance in the CARICOM Region, Climate
Change and Disaster Management in CARICOM, Trade and
Investment as well as the recognition of the
Caribbean Sea as a Special Zone, Foreign Ministers
of Barbados, Guyana, Grenada, Jamaica and St Vincent
and the Grenadines engaged members of academia and
the Japanese public in discussions on the link
between Climate Change and bio-diversity, and on the
devastating impact of Climate Change on the
countries of the Region. - 30 -
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org