Press release 30/2003
(14 February 2003)
Good morning Ladies and Gentlemen
Hon Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago
Other Heads of Government
Hon. Ministers of Government
Distinguished Delegates to the 14
th
Inter-Sessional Meeting of the Conference
Members of Parliament
Your Excellencies, the Ambassadors to CARICOM and other Members of the
Diplomatic Corps
Distinguished Invitees
Members of the Media
Ladies and gentlemen
Welcome to the Opening Ceremony of the 14th Inter-Sessional
Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community. I
hope it is for you as great a pleasure being here as it is for me to welcome
you.
This occasion is particularly pleasing to me as Secretary-General of the
Caribbean Community, for it is the year in which we celebrate the 30th
Anniversary of the establishment of the Caribbean Community. It was in 1973, 4
July that the four Founding Fathers of CARICOM - Errol Barrow of Barbados,
Forbes Burnham of Guyana, Michael Manley of Jamaica and Eric Williams of
Trinidad and Tobago - the leaders of the then four independent member states of
the earlier established Caribbean Free Trade Area (CARIFTA), took the historic
step at Chaguaramas, here in Trinidad and Tobago, to establish the Caribbean
Community and Common Market (CARICOM). Today, 30 years later, with eleven
additional members, and four Associate Members, the Community proudly commences
the celebration of this special Anniversary.
Also, today, to join us in our celebrations we are honoured to extend a
special welcome to His Excellency Mr Jan Kavan, President of the 57th
Session of the United Nations General Assembly, who has done us the signal
honour of joining us at today’s Inter-Sessional Meeting.
Now, Ladies and Gentlemen, as you know quite well, the 30th
Anniversary is the pearl anniversary and how appropriate. A pearl is defined in
the dictionary as a treasure, a precious thing, a gem. Our Region can be said to
encompass all of these features. Our nations are gems - ask the tourists - our
people are precious - I know I’ve lived with them for many a year - and our
Community which we celebrate today is indeed a rare treasure. Of this I am sure.
In fact, I’ve had it checked by the "jewellers" who have assured me
that it is the longest surviving integration grouping among developing countries
in the world.
Today, as part of our celebration, we will be conferring on three of our
Community’s outstanding citizens, Mr. Lloyd Best of Trinidad and Tobago, Dame
Eugenia Charles of Dominica and Sir John Compton of Saint Lucia - our Community’s
highest honour, the Order of the Caribbean Community, for their invaluable
contribution to the life and development of our Community. It is with a sense of
great pride that we congratulate them and join in celebrating their recognition
by the peoples of the Caribbean Community. They join an illustrious group of
Caribbean men and women who have dedicated much of their lives to the building
of our Caribbean Community.
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Caribbean Community we invite you all to join in
celebrating this milestone in your Community’s development, in as many
wholesome ways as you can. The Organs of the Community this week, launched a
special Community Celebration Programme with a brilliant lecture on Wednesday
night by the Hon. Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, followed
last night at the University of the West Indies Learning Resource Centre by a
most delightful cultural extravaganza.
Today, to symbolise the spirit of unity
which binds our Community together, one of our Community’s outstanding
athletes will at the end of this very Ceremony, commence the CARICOM Torch of
Unity Run. That Torch will be taken throughout the length and breath of our
Community - Member States and Associate Member States - and will arrive in
Jamaica in time for the 24th Regular Meeting of the Conference of
Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community. The full programme of
Celebrations planned by the Organs of the Community will soon be published.
Ladies and Gentlemen the achievement we celebrate as a Community is not the
mere fortune of longevity or growth in numbers, important as those undoubtedly
are. And very soon our numbers will grow with the imminent accession of Bermuda
as one of our cluster of treasured Associate Members. But in a wide variety of
fields - such as trade and economics, health and education, culture and foreign
relations - we have seen progress, admittedly not nearly as much as we would
have hoped for. Also, we have weathered many a storm and traversed many a rocky
road - which many a developing country groupings have not.
Even as we celebrate however, our situation calls for serious stocktaking. In
doing so, much will be seen to have been left undone - promise has vastly
outstripped performance and decision, implementation. There is an urgent need to
close those gaps. A clarion call must therefore now issue from this time and
place to make this 30th Anniversary year as a year of implementation,
with the Single Market and Economy (CSME), including the Caribbean Court of
Justice (CCJ) leading the way. And let us not forget what Carl Padmore reminded
us last night - it is one single market so if you don’t move fast someone else
might take it!
A second and no less urgent step, is the need to chart the course of the next
10 years of the Community’s life and development. Heads of Government will
today continue to give this issue the priority consideration its importance
demands. Yesterday, thanks to an initiative by the Hon. Prime Minister of
Trinidad and Tobago, some progress was made in this regard. But our labours will
only meet with success, if and when, we as a people, redouble our efforts to
build a Community more resistant to internal and external shocks, of which
indeed, there are many confronting us - Crime and Aids, terrorism and war, just
to name a few.
But today, as we approach the second generation in the life of the Community,
let us celebrate the achievement of the first, and while doing so, move with
determination and commitment, to redouble our efforts and build a Community
worthy of the foundations laid by the Founding Fathers and one which our
grandchildren deserve to inherit. In this way we will all have made our
contribution to the building of a Caribbean Community worthy of the highest
aspirations of our Caribbean Civilisation.
I thank you.