Press release 108/2004
(4 July 2004)
Mr. Chairman;
Colleague Heads of Government;
Distinguished Members of the Legislative,
Judicial and Executive Authorities of Grenada;
Esteemed Secretary General of the Commonwealth;
Esteemed Secretary General of the Organisation of American States;
Excellencies of the Diplomatic Corps;
Distinguished Delegates;
Specially Invited Guests;
Ladies and Gentlemen;
Brothers and Sisters:
Prime Minister Mitchell and the Grenadian people have succeeded in making the
Antigua and Barbuda delegation feel more than being welcome guests, we are
family too, and that we are “at home” here in the Spice Island. Our
hosts have obviously put special efforts into the organization of this
Conference and have made superb arrangements for our work and our comfort.
I am confident that every delegation in this assembly will endorse these
sentiments.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I would like to take this opportunity to thank those of my colleague Heads of
Government who recognise the unique challenges my infant Government faces, and
who have volunteered technical support to help move Antigua and Barbuda
forward. I must also take the opportunity to record my appreciation for
the cooperation, for the wise counsel, and for the generous support that our
esteemed Secretary General has extended during my brief tenure as Chairman of
the Conference of Heads of the Community.
As you well know, ladies and gentlemen, there is no means of preparation for
a first time Prime Minister who finds himself Chairman of the Conference of
Heads of the Community the very moment he takes his oath of office. When a
novitiate Prime Minister is immediately faced with the unconstitutional removal
of the democratically elected President of a member state, his obvious and his
only option is to declare, as I did:
Thank God for PJ Patterson!
Thank you, again, Prime Minister Patterson.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
Paradoxically, and very regrettably, a “No Admittance to Opposition
Politicians” sign continues to hang over the door to the councils of CARICOM,
and to CARICOM’s counsel. Fortunately, our esteemed Secretary General is
always-on-duty as mentor and midwife to first-timers like me.
I must confide that my already high esteem for our Secretary General grew
immensely on my recent visit to CARICOM Headquarters in Georgetown. I was not
prepared for the constraints under which our Secretariat and our Secretary
General are required to function. That these men and women are able to turn in
the sterling performances that they so routinely deliver is telling testimony to
the character and the calibre of CARICOM’s headquarters team, and of its
leadership.
We who operate on CARICOM’s upper deck have a deep obligation to the team
that runs the CARICOM engine room in Georgetown. Though less than
adequately equipped, and though inadequately rewarded, they continue to keep the
“SS CARICOM” securely on course. I invite you to join me in applauding our
committed headquarters crew.
Colleagues Heads of Government of the Community:
I come to my first CARICOM Summit with expectations tempered by the
recognition of reality. I am, nonetheless, optimistic that this meeting will
constructively engage the question of governance in the region, boldly determine
the restructuring of the Secretariat, and set generous rewards for CARICOM’s
officers. I am equally optimistic that over the coming days, pending issues
relating to the Single Market will be successfully negotiated.
Not all issues, however, will lend themselves to ready resolution.
A current Single Market concern that could not have been predicted is the
threat to our societies of the alarming influx of seasoned criminals deported
from the United States and the United Kingdom. Some of those deportees
have spent virtual lifetimes in the exporting countries. Now, as in recent
years, they are being deposited in societies in which they have only the most
tenuous family connections; if any at all. They enter our communities in a state
of alienation.
Jamaica is fortunate to have pre-empted a recent wave of hundreds of such
deportees from the UK. Once again, Prime Minister Patterson has demonstrated why
he is the Grandmaster among us.
These unexpected and unwelcome deportees, and the Caribbean Court of Justice,
are CARICOM issues that West Indians readily grasp.
On both issues, the dominant response of large numbers of Caribbean people is
fear. Our societies are fearful that the unchecked movement of criminal
deportees across CARICOM borders will be an unwelcome and immediate outcome of a
full fledged Single Market.
Against this fear, there is limited public comprehension or conviction of the
potential benefits that the Single Market will bring to our societies. Jamaica’s
determination of constitutional issues related to the Caribbean Court of Justice
is encouraging, and is to be applauded.
I must, however, caution this meeting that in other member states, my own
country included, the jury is still out on the Caribbean Court of Justice. Three
landmark Privy Council decisions, all arising from constitutional motions, leave
lingering doubts in large numbers of the Antigua and Barbuda population about
the wisdom of abandoning what many see as “The protection of the Privy Council”.
Each of those three Privy Council judgments found that unanimous decisions of
our Court of Appeal were fatally flawed.
Many Antiguans and Barbudans, perhaps a majority of my compatriots, see these
judgments as definitive cases against transfer of final appellate jurisdiction
to the Caribbean Court of Justice. Quite candidly, I am yet to be persuaded that
the Government of Antigua and Barbuda can avoid formal action to achieve
national consensus on the issue of the Caribbean Court of Justice. It
could well be that in seeking national consensus on the Caribbean Court of
Justice certain Caribbean Governments might have to venture into relatively
uncharted waters in their relationships with Opposition leadership in the
Region.
It is a pity that CARICOM has not yet sought to make itself a pasture in
which the Region’s political lambs and lions could lie down together.
Think of how wonderful that would be.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
At this meeting, we will be launching Radio CARICOM and considering a wider
communications thrust that is the most ambitious ever undertaken by the
community. Long overdue, this is a most welcome development. I urge
colleagues to give consideration to maximum use of the Internet in these
communications efforts. Moreover, I urge colleagues to consider means by
which CARICOM can assist in reducing the digital divide between its member
states and the developed nations. Any initiative in this area will be of
immense benefit to the people of our region.
As we consider options for ensuring enduring benefits for our societies, we
must give profound thought to the factors that underpin development strategies
in tourism-driven economies in our Region. In a number of member states,
our principal development strategy consists, essentially, of extended tax
holidays - for a quarter of a century in some cases – and the virtual giveaway
of prime assets that are among the most coveted anywhere in the world, our
incomparable Caribbean beach fronts. Fire sale prices for prized
beachfronts and the abolition of virtually all import duties can hardly be the
best foundation for sustainable development.
Even as our region records continuing growth in visitor arrivals, tourism
revenue and Gross Domestic Product, many of our economies, Antigua and Barbuda’s
included, are in serious trouble.
Clearly, an examination of these factors and some measure of cohesion in
investment incentives could be of immeasurable benefit to all member states.
It strikes me that related to all of this, there is urgent need for
rationalisation of intra-Caribbean air services. Certain member states pay
significant subsidies to international air carriers. At the same time,
they resolutely deflect similar support to LIAT, which lay claim to being “The
Caribbean Airline” with greater legitimacy than every other air carrier.
With all of this, ladies and gentlemen, there continues to exist the
unfathomable anomaly that Tourism, the sector that drives most Caribbean
economies, is not even on the Agenda for this CARICOM Summit. Tourism may,
of course, be subsumed in various agenda items over the next three days.
Still, the Caribbean’s major provider of jobs and revenues should be an
automatic candidate for permanent listing on the Agenda of every CARICOM Summit.
Of urgent necessity, energy is down for discussion at this meeting. I
have a particular interest in this issue.
Antigua and Barbuda is locked into an agreement with a sole fuel supplier
that amounts to a monopoly that spans several decades. On this topic, I must
record my personal appreciation and my country’s gratitude for Prime Minister
Manning’s demonstrated commitment to providing non oil producing member states
with some measure of relief.
In this sense, Trinidad and Tobago is not only a good neighbour. Prime
Minister Manning’s policies have made his country a protective bigger brother
to other member states.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
I must seize this opportunity to extend sincere good wishes to my colleague
Heads of Government whose countries are in competition for selection for the
remaining seven venues for World Cup Cricket, 2007.
Ladies and Gentlemen:
On that convivial note, I wish to conclude by thanking you for your generous
indulgence.
May God bless every one of you.
May God bless all our nations.