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(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen,
Greater Georgetown, Guyana) “Nations need to move
beyond trivial nationalistic turf and collaborate or
perish.”
This was the strong word from the
Officer in Charge of Human and Social Development at
the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretariat Ms.
Myrna Bernard as she addressed the opening ceremony
of the two-day inaugural CARICOM-UNASUR High Level
Youth Exchange hosted by the President of the
Republic of Suriname on Thursday.
Ms. Bernard asserted that
globalization had forced nations to collaborate and
“giants to learn to dance.” She stated that in this
small global village there was no room for “turfism”
but opportunities for groupings to forge
partnerships and collaborate for their own
sustainability and survival.
She told more than 100 youth
leaders and other delegates gathered at the Torarica
Hotel in Paramaribo, Suriname that it was time to
stop viewing emerging groups as threats and “move
beyond trivial nationalistic turf to assess and
embrace as you find appropriate, the integration of
global ideas, skills and cultures.”
“A perspective which causes us to
view new groupings such as UNASUR as vehicles
through which we can forge collaboration and
partnerships for mutual sustainability in a
globalized Community, is therefore one to be
encouraged,” she stated, also noting that Suriname
and Guyana were both Members of CARICOM and UNASUR.
The High Level Youth Exchange was
convened to develop a framework for cooperation
between young people of both regions – cooperation
in areas of integrative regional youth policies,
youth leadership and governance structures; and
build leadership capacity and explore solutions to
the many issues and challenges which youth of the
two regions might have in common. The Meeting hoped
to spawn a framework for a regional youth policy and
deepened relations between both regions.
According to Ms. Bernard, the
framework should serve as a youth vision of
collaboration and inform the design of future
cooperation.
Ms. Bernard also stressed the
importance of youth participation, noting that it
was an important strategy to empower young people to
define and articulate concerns of interest to them
and to design, negotiate and implement solutions to
those concerns.
“Meaningful youth participation”
she added, “reduces the incidence of youth
marginalisation, alienation and exclusion and
enhances the relevance and responsiveness of
development policies and programmes.”
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