Madame Chair, Deputy Prime Minister of Barbados
Honourable
Ministers
Director-General,
RNM
Distinguished
Delegates
Assistant
Secretaries General and Members of Staff of the Secretariat
Members of the Media
Ladiesand Gentlemen
As
Secretary-General of the Caribbean Community, the pleasurable task is mine this
morning to welcome you all to the 14th Meeting of the Council for
Trade and Economic Development (COTED). I especially extend a warm and most
hearty welcome to the delegation of Montserrat, whose Minister will preside over
this Meeting. This is a source of great joy to us as it has been sometime now
since this member of the CARICOM family has been able to join us for these
deliberations. I had a special welcome to the new Honourable Minister of
Suriname, who replaces his colleague so tragically lost to us last September,
and whom we remember with deep emotional recollection.
Honourable
Ministers, ladies and gentlemen, at this first Ministerial Council session for
2003, I would like to extend to everyone the very best wishes for the New Year.
I am looking forward to a most productive and decisive year as befits the 30th
Anniversary of our Caribbean Community. It is therefore my fervent hope that
this Meeting will set the tone for this historic year with its focus,
productivity and decisiveness.
Honourable
Ministers I would like us to bear in mind one key word as today we begin this
series of Ministerial sessions, culminating in 14 days time with the 14th
Inter-Sessional Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government. That word
simply put is action.
No
one appreciates more than I do, the necessity to ensure that intra-regional
arrangements and institutions are founded on secure and transparent agreements.
Like everyone else around this table, I am also cognizant of the fact that no
country willingly enters into any arrangement without attempting to secure its
best interests.
The
present reality remains however, that having negotiated, signed and in some
cases ratified, agreements, the Caribbean Community is today still short of the
goals it has set itself towards bringing the Single Market and Economy into
operation.
The
essence of our Caribbean Community is that it cannot exist without the full and
active involvement of all its Member States. Whatever initiatives are being
pursued must be agreed to by all our Member States and it therefore is incumbent
on them all to ensure that the requisite steps are taken to guarantee their
domestic implementation. Involvement does not end with decision-making – but
with implementation.
Madame
Chair, Ladies and Gentlemen, there can be no more glaring evidence of our
shortcomings than an issue that strikes at the very heart of Community.
Community is nothing if not a co-mingling of peoples and with this clearly in
mind in July 1995 in this very room, our Heads of Government at their 16th
Meeting agreed, and I quote:
“as
a first step towards facilitating the free movement of skilled persons among
Member States, to implement with effect from 1 January 1996, the free movement
of CARICOM Nationals who are University graduates, subject to the acceptability
of their credentials by the Member State concerned.”
Further
at its 17th Meeting at Bridgetown, Barbados, in 1996, the Conference
agreed, and I quote again:
“all Member
States should conclude the arrangements for providing for the facilitation of
travel and the free movement of university graduates prior to the next Meeting
of the Conference of Heads of Government:
"free
movement should be extended to cover artistes, sportspersons, musicians and
media workers as early as possible.”
Today
almost eight years since that first decision, and even with a final adjustment
last year to see this measure in force by December 31, 2002, we are still
awaiting its full implementation. And that decision eight years ago was “as a
first step.”
This
is just one example of our failure to match decision with implementation and
promise with practice. I implore you Honourable Ministers, in this our 30th
Anniversary year, let COTED set an example of keeping faith with the decisions
it takes.
Over
the next two days, items relating to the implementation of the Single Market and
Economy will no doubt take centre stage but there are other pressing matters
with which this meeting will be concerned. For example , no one will be unaware
of the difficulties with which our Aviation industry is faced which were brought
starkly into the spotlight earlier this week. Transportation is a critical
component in the co-mingling of peoples no less than it is for the trade in
goods and therefore warrants significant attention.
Key
external economic and trade relations are also on the agenda. In fact, the world
today seems to be a never ending round of negotiations whether it is at the
multi-lateral level for us of the World Trade Organisation, or the Free Trade
Area of the Americas or at the bilateral level with Costa Rica, or Canada. We
must therefore equip our Regional Negotiating Machinery with the capacity to
defend our interests and advance our ambitions in those arenas.
Whatever
partnerships we forge in those arenas must however be anchored upon the
foundations we build internally in our Single market and Economy or we may well
find ourselves adrift in that turbulent sea or as my mentor the late William
Demas used to say that jungle of international relations.
And how right he would be if he were here today, as we confront a world
teetering on the brink of war, a neighbour locked in a bitter internal conflict,
both of which are likely to impact negatively on our Community, and not only in
regard to the price of oil and our tourism.
Honourable
Ministers, Distinguished Representatives, Ladies and Gentlemen, it is against
this background that it has fallen to COTED to start this key round of Community
Meetings, and I would like to believe that at the end of the series of meetings
in Trinidad and Tobago on February 15, the people of our Community would be able
to look back and say that this, the 14th Meeting of the Community’s
Council for Trade and Economic Development, did truly set the tone for an
action-oriented 30th Anniversary of their Community.
It
is in our hands.
I
thank you.