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(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen,
Greater Georgetown, Guyana) His Excellency, Anthony
Liverpool, Director-General of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, Antigua and Barbuda, this morning,
applauded Japan for being one of the few countries
to date, which have provided their full pledge to
Haiti.
Japan, he stated, had pledged and delivered the
sum of US$100- million to the Haiti reconstruction
programme, after that country was hit by a major
earthquake in January 2010.
Ambassador Liverpool was delivering opening
remarks as co-Chair of the Fifteenth CARICOM-Japan
Consultation that opened in Georgetown on Monday at
the CARICOM Secretariat. The consultation, he
stated, was organized to review the technical
cooperation relationship, and the successes achieved
thus far.
It is also examining ways to strengthen future
CARICOM-Japan partnership, within the context of the
CARICOM’s current situation, which according to
Ambassador Liverpool, “has seen many developments
and gains, but which still grapples with many
challenges precipitated by the global economic and
financial crisis among other factors.”
Ambassador Liverpool pointed to the strength of
the relationship between Japan and CARICOM, noting
that “the fact that this occasion marks the
fifteenth time that we are convening for
consultations between the Officials of CARICOM and
Japan is testimony to the valuable and long-standing
relations that have been forged between the Member
States of the Caribbean Community and Japan.”
According to Ambassador Liverpool, formal
relations with Japan, established since 1993, had
borne fruit that was evident in a number of
cooperation initiatives and technical projects in a
wide range of areas, which had redounded to the
benefit of the Community and its peoples.
He referred to the New Framework for
Japan-CARICOM Cooperation for the Twenty-First
Century, which came out of the Second CARICOM-Japan
Ministerial Conference in September 2010, and
explained that the Framework provided the scope for
further collaboration in a number of political,
economic and social areas.
He also expressed hope that the consultation
would help to advance the necessary follow-up work
to concretize the decisions from that Meeting.
However, he hastened to note that follow-up work had
already started: for example the convening of the
CARICOM-Japan Public-Private Joint Economic Mission,
culminating with a CARICOM-Japan Business Seminar
held in Trinidad and Tobago in November 2011.
Ambassador Liverpool also referred to the
earthquake and tsunami, which hit Japan in March
2011 and claimed the lives of thousands of Japanese
citizens, as well as the consequent fall-out from
the damage to the nuclear facility at Fukushima.
Those disasters, he stated, were poignant reminders
of the vulnerability of both large and small states
to natural disasters; and emphasized the need for
greater collaboration in disaster management and
risk reduction.
In his response, Head of the Japan Delegation, HE
Ambassador Akira Yamada, Director General, Latin
American and Caribbean Affairs thanked the CARICOM
Secretariat for organizing the consultation and
noted that the Caribbean Community had a very strong
and important voice in the international arena,
particularly on issues relating to the environment.
“Caribbean countries are becoming more and more
important to the International Community,” he added.
This, he said had also signaled the importance of
Japan strengthening its relations with the
Community. He remarked that while existing relations
“is good” there was however room for enhancing such
relations. He mentioned the proposed 2014 CARICOM-
Japan Friendship Year Collaboration as one of the
tools that could be used to strengthen CARICOM-Japan
relations.
To this, Ambassador of Japan to CARICOM HE
Yoshimasa Tezuka agreed and added that CARICOM could
not be underestimated as demonstrated in its
political leverage in the international arena.
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