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(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen,
Greater Georgetown, Guyana) It is my most distinct
pleasure to receive today your Letters of Credence,
accrediting you as Canada’s fifth Plenipotentiary
Representative to the Caribbean Community.
Excellency, the relationship
between Canada and the members of the Caribbean
Community is a long-standing, historical and special
one. It is built on common values, mutual respect
and quite often, by support for each other’s
viewpoints on a number of global issues of critical
importance.
This Special Relationship can be
traced as far back as the late 17th century when
Canadian flour and codfish and Caribbean rum
constituted the backbone of the trade between the
Canadian Maritime Provinces and the West Indian
colonies. These ties were formalised in 1912 with a
trade arrangement that resulted in the movement of
goods between Canada and most of the British West
Indies, at preferential tariff rates. The
Canada-West Indies Trade Agreement in 1925, which
lowered the tariffs on an increased number of goods
entering Canada from the anglophone Caribbean
further cemented the trade links.
Since then CARICOM-Canada
relations have matured and expanded to include
development and political issues, as well as
technical assistance. Canada is also home to one of
the largest overseas communities of persons of
Caribbean origin. CARICOM Day is celebrated annually
in Canada. Though set aside for the CARICOM
Diaspora, they are joined by our Canadian friends
and partners to commemorate the CARICOM integration
journey and the excellent relations which both sides
have forged during the course of that journey.
At the political level, CARICOM
and Canada’s shared interests and mutual
understanding of a range of multilateral issues have
led to regular interfaces at various levels. And in
this regard, I was extremely pleased to have met
most recently with your Minister of State, the
Honourable Diane Ablonczy in the margins of the 66th
UN General Assembly earlier this month. It was a
very fruitful encounter in which we touched on
various issues. I certainly look forward to hosting
her here at the Secretariat, one of these days. The
Community looks forward to continuing those
discussions with your Foreign Minister, the
Honourable John Baird, in the margins of the
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Perth,
Australia, later this year.
Your Excellency, these meetings
provide a useful forum, not only for CARICOM and
Canada to reiterate their commitment to the
advancement of their relations, but also for the
Community to engage Canada as one of our most
important development partners, on some of the
critical issues impacting our Region. Time does not
allow me to expound on all of them here today, but I
should like to take this opportunity to highlight
two very important areas of our relationship.
You would be well aware that the
$600M funding to the Region, as announced by the
Honourable Prime Minister Stephen Harper in 2007 has
facilitated, among other things, the re-opening of a
CARICOM Representation Office in Haiti (CROH). The
CROH plays a critical role in facilitating Haiti’s
readiness to function within the CSME. This process
was severely disrupted by the devastating January
2010 earthquake which further depleted the country’s
institutional and human resource capacity, as Haiti
lost many of its senior public servants including
several with responsibility for the implementing of
the CSME. I wish to take advantage of this
opportunity to thank Canada for the support so
generously provided and which you continue to
provide.
Excellency, it is now even more
critical than ever that Haiti continues to receive
the support of the Community through the invaluable
work of the CROH. This work not only facilitates
Haiti’s integration into the CSME, but also has been
successful in raising the profile of the Caribbean
Community in Haiti, and vice versa, through people
to people contact and public information sharing,
particularly through the media. In this regard, the
Community looks forward to receiving word of
Canada’s favourable consideration of the extension
of this important project.
A second aspect of CARICOM-Canada
relations which I would like to highlight, are the
ongoing negotiations for a Trade and Development
Agreement. The Community is pleased at the keen and
earnest approach which Canada is taking towards
these negotiations. I recognize that there are some
sensitive issues on both sides still to be worked
out. However, I am confident that our excellent
CARICOM and Canadian negotiators, buoyed by the
political good will which is driving this
initiative, will find mutually acceptable solutions,
leading to the early conclusion of the Agreement. It
is my expectation that this Trade and Development
Agreement will redound to the benefit of both Canada
and the Caribbean Community.
Excellency, before closing I
would like to shift the focus for a moment to
commend Canada on its role as an exemplary global
leader, quietly but steadfastly promoting the
principles of peace, stability and development. The
G-20, a grouping which owes its design and
establishment to Canada, continues to be a forum
holding significant global influence. The Community
is deeply appreciative of Canada’s effort as an
advocate of CARICOM’s interests and concerns in the
G-20 and in lending support for the Region’s calls
for special and differential treatment for the Small
Vulnerable Economies that we are.
It is in this tradition of close
and mutually beneficial relations, High
Commissioner, that I gladly accept your credentials.
I formally bid you a warm and special Caribbean
welcome to the Community and I, along with my
colleagues at the Secretariat, look forward to
working with you in order to further nurture the
longstanding, fruitful and special relationship
between the Caribbean Community and Canada.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org
caricompublicinfo@gmail.com
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