Senator the Hon. Dr. John Watts, Deputy to the Governor-General of Grenada;
Dr. the Hon. Keith Mitchell, Prime Minister of Grenada;
Hon. Sir Curtis Strachan, Speaker of the Assembly, and the House of Representatives of
Grenada;
Hon Ralph Maraj, Foreign Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, representing the
Hon. Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago and Chairman of the Conference of the Caribbean
Community;
Hon. Ministers of Government;
Honourable Representatives of the Assembly;
Members of the Diplomatic Corps;
Members of the Media;
Distinguished Guests;
Ladies and Gentlemen.
As Secretary-General of the Caribbean Community, it gives me great pleasure to be here
in St. George's Grenada, for the Second Sitting of the Assembly of Caribbean Community
Parliamentarians. I am indeed honoured to be afforded the opportunity to address you. May
I first of all extend the Community's heartfelt thanks to the Government of Grenada - and
in particular the Honourable Prime Minister - and Parliament of Grenada, particularly the
Honourable Speaker, for being ready and willing to host the Sitting of this august
assembly. Their commitment to the democratic process augurs well for the continued
strengthening and deepening of the regional integration movement.
This process, as embodied in this institution, saw its beginnings, as you have been
told, here in Grenada at this very hotel in Grand Anse, at the Tenth Meeting of the
Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community, in July 1989. It was here
that an agreement was forged that provided for the establishment of the institution of the
Assembly of Caribbean Community Parliamentarians, thanks to the initiative of the then
Prime Minister of Barbados, the Hon. Erskine Sandiford, who in 1987 at the Eight Meeting
of the Conference of Heads of Government in Saint Lucia, first proposed the creation of
this vital regional institution.
The inaugural Sitting of the Assembly took place in Bridgetown, Barbados, nine years
later, in May 1996. Three years thereafter, we are meeting here for the Second Sitting to
impart a much needed boost to this institution and indeed, to make sure its future
development. The fact that concerns were raised recently in the press about the
functioning of the Assembly, underscores the Region's interest in this institution and
attests to the value the Region places in democratic governance. It is with this in mind,
I suggest that we work to ensure that this Assembly becomes a more vibrant part of the
institutional framework of the Caribbean Community.
This will be in keeping with the
Region's well-earned international recognition as a leader in the sphere of good
governance and democracy. Recent evidence of this leadership role can be gleaned from the
fact that, even as we gather here today, the ACP-EU Joint Assembly is sitting in our
sister CARICOM State of The Bahamas, and it was a mere couple of weeks ago that the
Commonwealth Parliamentary Association sat at the birthplace of the Community in
Chaguaramas, Trinidad and Tobago. One can fairly say it's the season of democracy in the
Region.
In this general regard, we will do well to remember that among the many objectives of
the Assembly, as identified by the previous speaker, are to promote greater understanding
among Member States for the purpose of realising and safe guarding the ideals and
principles of democratic governance in the Community and facilitating the economic and
social advancement of their peoples; and to encourage the adoption by the governments of
Member States of the Community of a common policy on economic, social, cultural,
scientific and legal matters deliberated upon by the Assembly.
It is important to note, Ladies and Gentlemen, that to achieve these objectives, the
Assembly has been endowed with the following functions and powers;
- to make recommendations to the Conference, the Council, institutions, associate
institutions and the Secretariat;
-to request from the above-mentioned bodies information and reports for discussion;
-discuss and make recommendations on any matter within the scope of the objectives of
the Community and any matter referred to it by the Conference, the Council or any
institution or Associate Institution; and
-to adopt resolutions on any issue or matter arising under the Treaty.
This institution is a unique one among all the institutions of the Community. It is the
only institution of the Community which provides for the representation of opposition as
well as of government parliamentarians. Perhaps the day is not far off when institutional
arrangements would also be designed to incorporate formally the views of opposition
leaders on critical regional issues. Indeed, the framework of regional democratic
structures, including this Assembly - perhaps headed by this Assembly - may need at this
turn of the century to undergo a process of review and, if necessary, reconstruction to
ensure not only their more efficient functioning, but also that all elements of the wider
civil society have a direct voice in the process of regional economic, social and
political development.
The Order Paper before this Meeting reflects many of the pressing issues facing the
Community as it heads towards the 21st Century. The Conference of Heads of
Government, the Supreme Authority of the Community, will itself be meeting at the
birthplace of the Community in Trinidad and Tobago in another two weeks to grapple with
some of these issues, in particular, the effectiveness of our institution to spearhead the
Community's progress into the 21th Century. This Assembly may care to provide the Heads of
Government with the benefit of its own deliberations on some of these issues. We are
certain to find that in its deliberations, the Assembly will focus on many of these
issues, such as :
-progress towards the establishment of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ);
-progress towards the establishment of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy;
-The Caribbean in the 21st Century;
-Human Resource Development in the Region;
-Crime in the Caribbean;
-The Community's External Relations including the series of current negotiations,
relating to the post-Lome IV arrangements, the next round of negotiations in the World
Trade Organisation, and the Free Trade Area of the Americas, now being spearheaded by the
Regional Negotiating Machinery;
-The Banana dispute; and indeed,
-The Role of Cricket in Regional Development.
You will find in all of these issues, matters of substance to the Community. As
Secretary-General, I have brought with me a team of technocrats to assist you in the
process of your deliberations.
Mr. Speaker, Mr. Prime Minister, Hon. Parliamentarians, Ladies and Gentlemen, I have
unbounded faith in the Caribbean persona to, as it were, play the right stroke at the
right time even if only in the nick of time. Although this institution has been off to a
slow start, I have no less confidence in its ability to play that stroke on behalf of the
full democratic development of the Regional Integration Movement.
I am therefore confident that your deliberations here today and tomorrow will provide
the Region with the foundation for winning innings for the Caribbean Community to march
confidently into the next century.
Mr. Speaker, I thank you.