(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) Her Excellency Ambassador Gail Mathurin,
Director-General of the Office of Trade Negotiations
(OTN) of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM)
Secretariat indicated on Monday that the Region was
satisfied with the first round of the CARICOM/Canada
Trade and Development Negotiations, held November
9-13 in Bridgetown, Barbados.
She was at the time speaking a press briefing at
which she was introduced to the media by CARICOM
Secretary-General His Excellency Edwin Carrington as
the new Director-General of OTN. Ambassador Mathurin
also took the opportunity to give an update on the
external trade agenda for the Community. The press
briefing was held via video conference, involving
Guyana and Barbados.
Expressing the Region’s satisfaction with the
first round of the CARICOM/Canada trade discussion,
the OTN Direct-General stated that it was conducted
in an “extremely amiable atmosphere.”
“The chemistry was good between the two sides and
this augurs well for the way forward,” she stated.
“It was an opportunity for both sides to present and
explain their mandates, positions and approaches to
several issues,” she said, adding that those
specific issues included matters related to market
access for agricultural good, services, culture and
investment, institutional issues.
With regard to CARICOM’s interest in a strong
development component within the agreement, the
Ambassador said the Region’s negotiators took full
advantage of that element of its mandate, which they
intended to advocate in two main ways.
In the first instance, she said, the Region was
seeking a “distinct, separate and discreet chapter”
on development co-operation.
“In each subject area, we are putting forward
specific development oriented proposals which the
region hopes will become articles in the various
facets of the agreement,” Ambassador Mathurin
stated.
Further, she stated, CARICOM was strongly
advocating that the agreement should make provisions
for the varying levels of development among CARICOM
countries as expressed in the Revised Treaty of
Chaguaramas in respect of special treatment of Less
Developed Countries.
In this regard, the OTN Director noted that
Canada recognised the need for asymmetry and
signalled its willingness to work with the region in
the development agreement in a way that was creative
and flexible.
Ambassador Mathurin stated that the negotiations
were poised to further strengthen long standing
relations between the Community and Canada, which is
the Region’s third largest trading partner.
Currently, trade and economic co-operation
relations between CARICOM and Canada are covered
under a number of instruments, including the 1979
CARICOM-Canada Trade and Economic Co-operation
Agreement and its Protocols, including the 1998
Protocol on Rum; CARIBCAN which grants unilateral
duty free access to eligible goods from beneficiary
countries in the English-speaking Caribbean up to
2011.
Two-way merchandise trade between CARICOM and
Canada averaged more than $700 million (US) over the
last ten years with a surplus averaging more than
$60 million (US) in favour of the Region.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org