| (CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen,
Greater Georgetown, Guyana) The curtains came down
on the 32nd Annual Meeting of the Conference of
Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM)
in St Kitts and Nevis on CARICOM Day (4 July), with
the Bureau of Heads agreeing that it was a focussed
meeting with positive outcomes.
CARICOM Chairman - the Honourable Denzil Douglas
- told Journalists at the closing ceremony and press
conference that the Summit was “focussed” and dealt
decisively with key issues including health, climate
change, agriculture and transportation.
With regard to health, Dr Douglas - who has lead
portfolio responsibility for Human Resource
Development, Health and HIV/AIDS in the
Quasi-cabinet of the CARICOM Conference of Heads of
Government - announced that the new Caribbean
Regional Public Health Agency (CARPHA) was now a
legally established entity, following the ceremonial
signing of the Inter-Governmental Agreement on
Saturday 2, July.
He added that it was a fitting tribute to the
Community that CARPHA had at last been realized
during the Community’s observance of the 10th
Anniversary of the Nassau Declaration, which
prescribed the health of the region as the wealth of
the region.
CARPHA was the third and final component of the
2001 Nassau Declaration to be realised – the other
two being the Pan Caribbean Partnership against HIV
and AIDS (PANCAP) and the Caribbean Cooperation in
Health (CCH). This agency should improve the
delivery of health care in the region by merging the
core functions of the five regional health
institutions - Caribbean Epidemiological Research
Center (CAREC); Caribbean Health Research Council (CHRC);
Caribbean Food and Nutrition Institute (CFNI);
Caribbean Environmental Health Institute (CEHI);
Caribbean Drug Testing Regional Laboratory (CDTRL).
The Prime Minister of St Kitts and Nevis pointed
to the significant role of the Community in the
impending United Nations High Level Meeting on
Non-Communicable Diseases prevention and noted that
this issue had been given priority attention as the
Region prepared its high-level delegation for that
special session of the United Nations General
Assembly (UNGASS) in September. One of the major
issues that the Community wants to include on the
agenda of the high level meeting is the formulation
of appropriate policies to address risk factors,
such as tobacco, alcohol, diet and lack of physical
exercises in an effort to promote healthy lifestyles
among its peoples.
The Caribbean Community has been deemed the
front-runner in the fight against chronic NCDS,
since its first ever Summit in NCDs in 2007, and was
largely instrumental in lobbying for the resolution
that spawned this special meeting to address the
pressing health problem of NCDs, which cause an
average of over 70 percent of the deaths, globally.
On the issue of Climate Change, Chairman Douglas
reported that Climate Change would be included on
the agenda of the 2011 Summit of the Americas as a
matter of priority, in light of the susceptibility
of Small Island Developing States (SIDs) to this
natural phenomenon. He also reported that the
Conference had reviewed the Region’s capacity to
respond to hurricanes and underscored the role of
the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA)
as facilitator, driver, coordinator and motivating
force for the promotion and engineering of
Comprehensive Disaster Management (CDM) in all
participating States. He further pointed to the
Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility as the
‘reservoir’ of funds from which Member States could
draw, following a natural disaster. The CCRIF is a
risk pooling facility, owned, operated and
registered in the Caribbean, for Caribbean
governments. It is designed to limit the financial
impact of catastrophic hurricanes and earthquakes to
Caribbean governments by quickly providing short
term liquidity when a policy is triggered.
Agriculture and transportation were also
mentioned as two priority issues on which the
Community would focus, moving forward. Referring to
the link between agriculture and transportation,
Prime Minister Douglas underscored the importance of
preserving food security in the region as well as
the need to transport adequately, people and goods
across the Community. Dr Douglas explained that
decisions were made to engage and involve the
private sector and the academic community in these
two priority areas.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org
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