1. The Fifth UK-Caribbean Forum, hosted by the
Government of Barbados, took place in Bridgetown on
26-28 April 2006. The Forum was co-chaired on the
Caribbean side by the Hon. Elvin Nimrod, MP,
Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade
of Grenada and current Chair of the CARICOM Council
for Foreign and Community Relations, and on the UK
side by the Rt. Hon. Jack Straw, MP, Secretary of
State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
2. Foreign Ministers from Antigua and Barbuda;
The Bahamas; Barbados; Belize; Dominica; Grenada;
Guyana; Jamaica; Saint Lucia; and Trinidad and
Tobago also participated. The Honourable Jerrol
Thompson Minister of Telecommunications, Science and
Technology represented St Vincent and the Grenadines
while Her Excellency Manorma Soeknandan represented
Suriname. The United Kingdom was also represented by
Lord Triesman, Parliamentary Under Secretary of
State in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office with
responsibility for the Caribbean; the Rt Honourable
Baroness Amos, Leader of the House of Lords; the Rt
Honourable Baroness Scotland, Minister of State at
the Home Office and Gareth Thomas MP, Parliamentary
Under Secretary of State at the Department for
International Development. The CARICOM Council of
Ministers responsible for National Security and Law
Enforcement was represented by the chairman, Senator
the Honourable Martin Joseph, Minister of National
Security of Trinidad and Tobago; the Chairman of the
Ministerial sub-committee responsible for Resource
Mobilisation and Implementation, Dr the Honourable
Peter Phillips, Minister of National Security of
Jamaica; and the Chair of the ad hoc Ministerial
sub-committee for Security Issues for Cricket World
Cup 2007, Honourable Mia Mottley, Deputy Prime
Minister of Barbados. The Honourable Dale Marshall,
Attorney General and Minister of Home Affairs of
Barbados also attended. Suriname was represented at
the Ambassadorial level. The British Virgin Islands
was a Participatory Observer.
3. Opening Remarks were made by the Prime
Minister of Barbados, the Rt. Hon Owen S. Arthur, by
Hon Elvin Nimrod, on behalf of the Council for
Foreign and Community Relations and by Lord Triesman,
on behalf of the UK .
4. Ministers emphasized the value of the Forum in
promoting and strengthening the unique ties that
exist between the UK and the Caribbean Community.
Under the theme “Partnerships for Promoting and
Sustaining Caribbean Development” the Forum
focused on strategies to achieve medium and
long-term development for the Caribbean as well as
security issues, including those related to
preparations for the Cricket World Cup in 2007. In
addition to the Open Sessions, Ministers met in
Retreat and held frank, cordial discussions on a
range of issues. In this regard, they agreed on
priority actions which should be implemented for
review at the next Forum. During the informal
sessions, Ministers drew up a list of actions which
they agreed to put into effect before the next
UK-Caribbean Forum. The
List is at Annex A.
MEDIUM AND LONG TERM ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
5. Ministers affirmed the longstanding
development partnership and confirmed their
commitment to achieving medium and long-term
sustainable economic growth for the whole Region,
while pursuing economic and social policies that
protect the most vulnerable members of society.
Ministers agreed to undertake concrete action to
improve the capacity of the public sector to provide
affordable and efficient services to their
populations. Ministers agreed that tackling public
debt and strengthening public financial management
systems were priority actions in this regard.
Ministers acknowledged that achieving this
commitment would not be easy. 6. Ministers
acknowledged the important role that the Diaspora
can play in the economic and social development of
the Caribbean and noted the efforts of the Caribbean
Governments to engage the Diaspora fully towards
this end.
Trade Issues
7. Ministers recognized the important role of
trade in UK-Caribbean relations and the need to
facilitate continued meaningful market access to the
European Union, in particular the traditional market
of the UK for Caribbean exports and the export of
non-traditional goods and services to the UK and EU
markets.
8. Ministers emphasized the importance of the
CARIFORUM/EC EPA negotiations as a vehicle for
achieving sustainable economic growth for the
Region. They noted that Phase 3 of the negotiations
had commenced in February 2006. The Ministers
acknowledged that the development dimension is a
central element of the EPA negotiations.
9. Ministers agreed that the erosion of EU
preferential treatment has made it necessary to
accelerate either the reform of existing
agricultural processes or the diversification into
new sectors or both.
10. With regard to sugar, Ministers welcomed
submission of the National Adaptation Strategies and
urged countries which have not already done so to
submit their strategy documents as soon as possible.
Ministers agreed that they would continue to lobby
in Europe for adequate amounts of EU transitional
funding, (the Accompanying Measures) and for it to
be frontloaded and disbursed promptly so that the
adjustment plans can be implemented before the end
of the phase-in period.
11. Ministers also confirmed their commitment to
seeking increased access to the European market for
sugar as a means of ameliorating the price
reduction. CARICOM will press for any Caribbean
Sugar Protocol shortfalls to be retained within
CARICOM.
12. Mindful of the critical importance of the
banana industry to the banana-exporting countries of
the Caribbean, Ministers agreed to support the
continuing efforts being made to ensure the
sustainability of the industry, and agreed to
continue to collaborate in representations to the
European Commission for the accelerated release of
European funds, intended to support the management
of preference erosion. They urged that the new EU
banana tariff not be subjected to further downward
revision, and that the EU bind such a tariff as soon
as possible.
13. Ministers recognised the importance of the
rice industry in the Region, with regard to
employment in both the agricultural and
manufacturing sectors, as well as food security for
the Region, and emphasized the need for continued
assistance to enhance the international
competitiveness of the industry.
14. In reviewing the status of the Doha
Development Agenda, Ministers reaffirmed that the
principles enunciated in the Valetta Statement on
Multilateral Trade, adopted at the Malta
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, needed to
be fully incorporated in the ongoing WTO
negotiations. They noted that the results of the WTO
Hong Kong Ministerial Meeting recognised some of
these principles, especially as they related to
small vulnerable economies, but that much remained
to be done. They agreed to support efforts in
accordance with the Doha and Hong Kong Ministerial
Declarations aimed at the adoption of meaningful and
concrete measures to facilitate the full integration
of small, vulnerable economies into the
international trading system. They reiterated their
commitment to seek a successful outcome, within the
established timetable, in which the development
dimension is fully integrated.
The CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME)
15. Ministers welcomed the launch in January 2006
of the CARICOM Single Market (CSM), recognising it
as a historic step towards the realization of the
CARICOM Single Market and Economy by 2008 which is
essential for the sustainable development of the
Region in an increasingly globalised world. They
looked forward to full participation in the CSM by
the end of June 2006.
16. Ministers stressed the importance of early
activation of the Regional Development Fund (RDF) to
the achievement of the objectives of the CSME, and
urged that all development partners give positive
consideration to contributing to it.
Investment Issues
17. Ministers recognised the urgent need for
continued improvements in the investment climate,
including in the overall regulatory framework, in
order to attract greater levels of both domestic and
foreign investment. They also emphasized that
investment in human resources was a key to
attracting investment. They welcomed the British
Prime Minister’s initiative to hold an investment
event in London in November 2006 with the objective
of showcasing the Caribbean to potential investors.
18. Ministers congratulated the Caribbean British
Business Council (CBBC) and the Caribbean
Association of Industry and Commerce (CAIC) on the
First UK-Caribbean Business Forum, held in London in
June 2005. They welcomed the decision to make the
Business Forum a biennial event, and looked forward
to the next event in the Caribbean in 2007. In this
context, they welcomed the convening of a
UK-Caribbean Business Encounter in the margins of
the Forum.
19. CARICOM Ministers noted the ongoing efforts
by CARICOM countries to restructure their economies
in order to make them more competitive an in this
regard, the integral role played by Research and
Development. They further emphasized the need to
continue and strengthen collaboration in this area.
20. Ministers agreed that the work of the OECD’s
Global Forum on Harmful Tax Practices showed that
progress had already been made towards a global
level playing field in the areas of transparency and
effective exchange of information in tax matters. In
this context, they looked forward to the publication
of the Level Playing Field Report, which would
provide a factual assessment of where the OECD and
non-OECD jurisdictions are in relation to the OECD
standards for transparency and information exchange.
It was important that all jurisdictions pursued the
necessary actions to achieve and then maintain a
level playing field. Ministers noted that certain
Caribbean jurisdictions would require technical
assistance for the implementation of some aspects of
the OECD’s initiative.
Tourism
21. Ministers recognised the vital importance of
the tourist industry to the further economic
development of the Caribbean. They undertook to
carry out a number of specific actions aimed at
expanding the tourist industry in the Region, and
ensuring that an increasing percentage of earnings
from tourism remained in the Region. They welcomed
the first steps which had been taken to develop a
Regional Tourism Investment Fund (RTIF), and agreed
to continue to support this initiative. Ministers
agreed on the importance of using the staging of the
2007 Cricket World Cup (CWC) in the Region to
showcase the Caribbean as a destination, not one
just offering traditional attractions, but one
offering a diversified tourism product. Ministers
welcomed the work which the Caribbean Hotel
Association (CHA) and the Caribbean Tourism
Organisation (CTO) were doing to promote tourism on
a regional basis, and urged them to continue to
develop this approach.
Climate Change and Disaster Management
22. Ministers recognised the challenges faced as
a result of climate change and extreme weather
events which may be exacerbated by global warming,
and noted the devastation to the Region caused by
hurricanes in 2004 and 2005, with Hurricane Ivan
having the most significant impact. They agreed on
the need for further regional preparedness planning
and welcomed the work being done by Governments in
the Region and by the World Bank, at the request of
the Caribbean, on a Catastrophic Risk Insurance
Scheme. They also agreed on the need for continued
support to further strengthen regional preparedness
and planning and welcomed the work done by the
Region. Ministers welcomed the outcome of the
Montreal Conference on Climate Change, at which all
countries agreed to explore the basis for future
action under the UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change and the World Conference on Disaster
Reduction and its Plan of Action in support of
building Resilient Communities.
Energy Security
23. Ministers discussed the challenges the Region
faced in relations to energy supply, not least in
the face of ongoing rises in the price of oil. They
agreed on the need to develop a long term strategy
to secure energy supplies from a mix of sources and,
in this respect, agreed to pursue a technical
exchange between both sides as a matter of urgency:
and to pursue further public, private and academic
cooperation and collaboration between the European
and the Region with regard to the development of
alternative sources of energy
Health and HIV/AIDS
24. Ministers noted, with deep concern, the
profound, deleterious effect which the spread of the
HIV/AIDS pandemic is having on the economic growth
and social development of the Caribbean as a whole.
Ministers agreed on the need to continue efforts to
stem the spread of the disease, to tackle stigma and
discrimination, and to focus action on the more
effective use of resources available. Ministers also
agreed to continue to collaborate on facilitating
this and efforts towards achieving universal access.
SECURITY
CARICOM-UK Regional Security Cooperation Plan
25. At the last Forum in May 2004, Ministers
underlined the significance of effective cooperation
between the Governments of the United Kingdom and
the Caribbean on law and enforcement, and reform of
the security sector, and decided to draw up a
Framework for Security Cooperation. This resulted in
the adoption, in October 2004, of the CARICOM-UK
Security Cooperation Plan, focusing on four
strategic priority areas – border security, regional
maritime cooperation, establishment of a regional
information and intelligence sharing network, and
training of security and law enforcement officials.
A Joint Management Committee (JMC) was established,
comprising representatives from the UK and CARICOM
Member States with responsibility for monitoring and
evaluating the implementation process. The Ministers
noted that subsequently CARICOM agreed to the
establishment of an institutionalised framework for
the management of crime and security issues in the
Region. This includes an Implementation Agency for
Crime and Security (IMPACS) to ensure the effective
implementation of these and other security measures
26. Ministers endorsed the Report of the JMC,
reaffirmed their full support for the activities
covered by it and acknowledged that in spite of
early challenges, the activation of the new
Framework for the Management of Crime and Security
in the Region has accelerated the pace of
implementation in the four priority areas under the
co-operation plan. The Ministers noted that the
particular progress is being made in human resource
development and leadership for the CARICOM security
and law enforcement community, acknowledged the
steps taken in maritime co-operation and reaffirmed
the aim of complete adherence to the Regional
Maritime (Aruba) Agreement. In intelligence
co-operation, Ministers further noted that the
elements of an effective regional system were coming
into place and co-operation with external partners
was being enhanced. Once the technical capabilities
for sharing were completed, it is expected that
enforcement agencies would make the fullest
operational use of the systems.
27. Ministers expressed their deep concern over
the illegal trade and availability of small arms and
light weapons (SALW) in the Region which contribute
to the increasing level of armed violence and
undermine stability, security and development. They
stressed the connection between drug trafficking,
illegal trade in small arms and organised crime and
the need to work on a regional SALW Plan. Ministers
also recognized the importance of global guidelines
on SALW transfers and called on the international
community to work together to develop international
norms on the transfer of SALW in the context of the
UN Programme of Action. Ministers also added their
voice to the calls for work to commence at the
United Nations on a treaty on the trade in all
conventional arms.
Border Security
28. On Border Security, Ministers emphasized the
importance of control of land, as well as maritime
borders. With regard to the Guyana-Venezuela border
controversy, both sides reaffirmed their unequivocal
support for the maintenance of Guyana’s territorial
integrity, including its unrestricted right to the
development of the entirety of its territory for the
benefit of its people. They expressed satisfaction
at the cordiality which had characterized relations
between Guyana and Venezuela in recent years, and
recognised the instrumental role of dialogue at the
highest levels in facilitating the commitment to a
peaceful settlement of the controversy under the
aegis of the UN Good Offices Process, and to
enhancing cooperation at the bilateral, regional and
multilateral levels.
29. The Ministers noted a report from Belize in
relation to the ongoing process to reach a just,
equitable and permanent solution to Guatemala’s
territorial claim to Belize within the framework of
the Organisation of American States (OAS). They
emphasized that the international community remained
fully supportive of the OAS process between Belize
and Guatemala in accordance with the Framework for
Negotiations and Confidence Building Measures of 7
September 2005, under which they will attempt in
good faith to resolve the dispute by negotiations,
and should this not be possible provided a mechanism
to allow recourse to an international judicial body
for final resolution. Ministers expressed the hope
that this mechanism will ensure that the dispute is
finally settled within a reasonable time. They
recalled and reaffirmed the strong support of the
Commonwealth Heads of Government (Malta 2005) and
CARICOM Heads of Government (Saint Lucia, July 2005)
for the sovereignty, security and territorial
integrity of Belize.
Preparations For Cricket World Cup 2007
30. Ministers agreed that Cricket World Cup (CWC
2007) preparations meshed closely with and are
contributing to the emerging collective security
capability of the Region as is being promoted under
the CARICOM/UK Security Cooperation Plan. For an
event of this scale regional coordination is
essential to ensure that security is in no way
compromised by facilitating quick and easy movement
of a large volume of persons and goods across the
Region. Ministers welcomed the steps already taken
including the CARICOM political leadership provided
by the establishment of the Ad Hoc Ministerial Sub
Committee for Security Issues pertaining to CWC 2007
and the identification of CWC 2007 security
coordination as a priority activity for the
Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS)
31. The UK agreed to support CARICOM in the
roll-out of its common visa arrangements for the
period of the CWC 2007 and to address urgently the
question of assisting in the issuance of such visas
in countries where CARICOM is not represented. The
UK would facilitate intelligence links with South
Asian and the other international intelligence
agencies and would examine the possibility of
providing operational support for disaster
preparedness. CARICOM would provide the UK with
updated versions of its regional threat assessment
as the basis for such intervention.
PARLIAMENTARY LINKS
32. Ministers welcomed the strong links between
the UK Parliament and Caribbean Parliaments. They
expressed satisfaction that representatives of the
UK Parliament were present at the Forum and had the
opportunity to exchange views with their
counterparts from the Caribbean.
FORUM 2008
33. Caribbean Ministers welcomed the UK’s offer
to host the next UK-Caribbean Forum in 2008.
APPRECIATION
34. Ministers expressed their appreciation to the
Government and People of Barbados for the excellent
arrangements made for the hosting of this, their
Fifth Forum.
Bridgetown, Barbados
28 April 2006
ANNEX A
FIFTH UK-CARIBBEAN MINISTERIAL FORUM
BRIDGETOWN, 26-28 APRIL 2006
LIST OF ACTIONS/INITIATIVES
AGREED BY BOTH SIDES
UK Commitments
1. The UK to continue to lobby the European
Commission, European Parliament and other Member
States for adequate and frontloaded and promptly
disbursed transitional assistance for Caribbean
Sugar Protocol countries.
2. The UK to collaborate with the region in
representations to the EC for the accelerated
release of European funds committed to support the
management of the EU banana market preference
erosion.
3. The UK is committed to helping the Caribbean
countries share in the benefits of international
trade and investment. To help meet this aim, the UK
will organize a Caribbean investment event in London
in 2006. The UK Government will also support a
number of business visits to the region during
financial year 2006/07.
4. The UK to continue to develop joint solutions
and provide assistance to the region as set out in
the four priority areas of CARICOM-UK Security
Cooperation Plan, including promoting assistance by
the EU and supporting further development of the
CIMA model once the Director is in post.
5. The UK to entertain specific requests for
assistance in relation to the security preparation
and planning for Cricket World Cup 2007, in
particular in the fields of immigration and visa
issuing, intelligence sharing, disaster preparedness
and law enforcement training, including through the
deployment of experts.
6. Through the Department for International
Development (DFID) and its engagement with other
development partners, the UK will continue to
support the Caribbean’s efforts at reducing poverty
and vulnerability to shocks and natural disasters
including through capacity enhancement in key areas.
7. The UK’s sustainable Development Fund to
continue to target the Caribbean as a priority
region.
8. The UK to continue to support the setting up
of a Caribbean Regional Tourism Investment Fund.
9. The UK to continue to extend the benefits of
the Chevening Fellowship Programme to the Caribbean
through eligibility of its nationals for
scholarships and fellowships.
10. The UK will use its best endeavours to
identify persons experienced in legal drafting.
CARICOM Commitments
1. CARICOM to continue to lobby the European
Commission, European Parliament, and other Member
States for adequate and frontloaded and promptly
disbursed transitional assistance for Caribbean
Sugar Protocol countries.
2. The Caribbean to pursue its objective to press
for any Caribbean Sugar Protocol shortfalls to be
retained within CARICOM.
3. The Caribbean to collaborate with the UK in
representations to the EC for the accelerated
release of European funds committed to support the
management of the EU banana market preference
erosion.
4. CARICOM to continue to take action towards the
full implementation of the CSME by 2008.
5. CARICOM to continue to implement policies that
contribute to disaster risk reduction and mitigate
the impact of natural disasters in the region.
6. CARICOM to work with British diplomatic
missions in the Region to identify candidates for
the Chevening Fellowship Programme.
7. CARICOM to continue the implementation process
in accordance with the CARICOM-UK Security
Cooperation Plan.
8. CARICOM to identify specific requirements for
assistance in the continuing planning and
preparation for CWC 2007.
9. CARICOM will nominate an individual to liaise
with the British re energy security.