Press release 147/2005
(4 July 2005 )
SALUTATIONS
It is with great satisfaction and optimism that I address you today as one of
the new generation of leaders who are emerging throughout the Caribbean to take
responsibility for the political, social and economic development of our Region
in a rapidly changing global environment.
First, I want to thank the Government and people of Saint Lucia for welcoming
us to this beautiful country, and for making the splendid arrangements for this
historic Conference.
I bring all delegates fraternal greetings from the people of the Commonwealth
of Dominica who in all wisdom, have recently endorsed my leadership as well as
the policies and programmes of the Dominica Labour Party.
As you are aware, we in Dominica, have in recent years experienced the
potentially negative effects of globalization on small island states. We are not
fully recovered, and although our peculiar vulnerabilities remain, all the signs
from the International Monetary Fund, and the other funding agencies that have
supported us, suggest that we have turned the corner. After years of stagnation
and negative growth we experienced a 3.5% growth last year, and are expected to
experience at least a 4% growth this year.
Throughout that period, we drew strength and courage from the fact that we
were not alone.
We knew that our allies would never let us go under. I therefore want to
again, in this forum, thank all our friends, and supporters, from far and wide
who stood by Dominica in its times of greatest need. Allow me also, to
particularly recognize the International Development and Donor Agencies, which
have maintained their support to Dominica.
In particular, I thank the European Union, Japan, Venezuela and Canada for
their long-standing support. I must also thank the People’s Republic of China,
for coming to our rescue in the nick of time.
But above all, I want to single out our OECS and CARICOM neighbours for their
unwavering support throughout the crisis. You have kept Dominica going by giving
support in critical areas of endeavour.
Out of this experience, we in Dominica have better understood the benefits of
unity and solidarity.
It is with this confidence, and determination that I stand before you today
with a new mandate to deepen and strengthen that relationship with our Caribbean
neighbours.
My friends, there is a certain inevitability about Caribbean integration. We
are all familiar with the external forces, which make it necessary for us to
unite in order to survive in the new global market place. I need not repeat them
here. We need to be mindful that there have always been internal factors
emanating from both the rulers and the ruled that have halted the march to
Regional integration.
Our colonial masters always craved for the convenience of having one single
jurisdiction, for reasons ranging from security to trade. On the other hand, the
poor masses always wanted a larger space within which they could find a safe
haven or a better standard of living. I am sure that in the minds of the slaves
who fled to Haiti to enjoy freedom after 1801 or the many migrants who moved
around the Region in search of employment, the Caribbean was and always will be,
one indivisible place.
In recent years, this quest for unity has periodically found expression at
the highest level. It seems as though every 15 or 16 years the spirit of
Caribbean unity reaches a climax and enables the Region to make a bold leap
forward towards its destiny of full integration.
Consider the following high-water marks:
• 1958 – the creation of the Federation of the West Indies
• 1973 – The signing of the Treaty of Chaguaramus
• 1989 – The Agreement of the Grand Anse Accord
• 2005 – The launching of the Caribbean Single Market and Economy (CSME).
My friends, this is the year in which we must make bold decisions to take the
process forward!
It would not be wise to assume that Regional integration, though inescapable,
will proceed smoothly. Those who have a vested interest in the status quo, those
who fear the unknown, and there are those who for their own selfish reasons,
will place considerable hurdles in the way of full integration.
A few weeks ago, I listened to an informal discussion on the subject of the
free movement of people within CARICOM. I was appalled to hear professional and
educated people who I believed understood the benefits of operating in a larger
domestic market, referring to the Free Movement of Skilled Nationals as people -
“flooding into our country” from other CARICOM states.
There is no doubt we face very serious challenges in the years ahead if we
are to achieve the dream of Caribbean unity.
However, I believe that at this juncture in our history, we should focus on
both the physical and mental infrastructures for Caribbean integration. The key
to integration and the operation of a single economy is the existence of
efficient systems of communication. We need to make sure that transport by both
air and sea, are available to take people and goods around the Region.
Governments of the Region and the private sector must wake up to the tremendous
opportunities for investment and profits in transport and communications.
I am convinced that maritime transport as well as telecommunications are the
missing pieces of the jig-saw puzzle. There is a huge demand for ongoing contact
between the people of the Region – at a price, which they can afford. I believe
that our business people have to look carefully at their pricing policies. It
seems to me that operators in the transport and communication sectors are
pricing themselves out of the market.
With respect to our mental preparedness for integration I still believe that
the greatest hurdle is “the lack of confidence in our own ability to shape our
own future”. Undoubtedly, this is a legacy of our colonial past and is still
pervasive.
However, it is surmountable. The same negative analysis was offered to
justify the continued disenfranchisement of our people and to stall the
independence movement.
I stand here today to affirm my confidence in the resilience of our people. I
salute a people who have lived through one of the most devastating disasters of
human history – racial chattel slavery – and have continued the struggle for
human dignity, freedom and respect. Those who know Caribbean people would
understand what I mean when I say that “even when we live like paupers, we think
like royalty”.
It may be that we only perform at our best, when our backs are against the
wall. It may be that the historical distractions prevent us from coming together
and digging into our reserves. However, I am of the firm view, that there is no
time like the present to demonstrate that resilience.
Today we face some of the most formidable challenges that small developing
countries could ever face, in every sphere of human endeavour. These problems
can only be addressed collectively.
High on this list would be:
• The Threat To Agriculture
Agriculture is still a major source of employment and its earnings
still contribute substantially to revenue for our countries. Both bananas
and sugar are in deep crisis. Protection, compensation and
diversification will require us to speak with one voice and share
information at all levels.
In this regard, I urge this Conference to rally around the Government
of St. Kitts and Nevis, as it embarks upon the tumultuous task of
grinding out its sugar industry. No matter the plans and preparations,
there will be social and economic dislocation in the sister isle. I
understand that this situation is necessary but never-the-less it is an
agonizing period of economic restructuring and transformation. My wish is
that, the Government and people of St. Kitts and Nevis find strength in
the support and solidarity that Dominica and the wider Caribbean will
demonstrate during this period of transformation.
Furthermore, I call on the international donor community to take the
initiative and assist in a tangible way, to ensure a minimal fall-out
from the closure of the sugar industry in St. Kitts.
• The Need To Diversify Our Tourism Product
Our tourism industry, an area in which we should have an absolute
advantage, is under threat from competition from a variety of sources,
and from countries as far as the Middle East. A tourism product made up
of sun and sea on small islands is rapidly becoming obsolete. We need to
offer the more discerning visitor a range of products or a package of
experiences that include Health/Sports/Cultural/Eco tourism.
I envisage the typical tourist of the future spending a few days on
the beaches in Barbados or Antigua, then moving on to enjoy the Jazz
festival in Saint Lucia, the wildlife reserves of Guyana, the playing
fields of Jamaica or Grenada and Carnival in Trinidad but never leaving
the Region before enjoying the forest, mountains and fresh water of
Dominica or the World Creole Music Festival.
Added to that list is also the issue of –
• HIV/AIDS
The biggest threat to us, however, is the HIV/AIDS pandemic that
recognizes no national borders. We in the Caribbean have the unenviable
task to turn around our reputation of having the highest incidence of the
virus in the world, second to Sub-Saharan Africa. We also need to remedy
the socio-cultural conditions that fuel its continued spread within the
general population. Needless to say, a concerted Regional effort is
necessary to stave off disaster.
The commendable efforts of the Pan Caribbean Partnership Against
HIV/AIDS (PANCAP) are to be encouraged. We need to pool resources to
conduct research, to share information on good practice, and to lobby for
better deals for medication, as well as other resources to prolong and
improve the quality of life of people living with the disease. The
scourge of HIV is probably the greatest test of our will to survive. And
since the purpose of life is survival, I am confident that we shall
overcome this as well.
• World Cup Cricket
I now want you to cast your mind to the future. In two years’ time we
shall be the hosts of the Cricket World Cup competition. We have two
choices. We can either make a disaster of it or make it an overwhelming
success.
This event, which will showcase the Caribbean to a world audience,
should have sent shock waves of excitement to all stakeholders from the
moment the Region was selected to host the event. This event offers us a
splendid opportunity to put our house in order, not only for the visitors
but also for our people.
I want to seize this opportunity, to appeal to the people of the
Caribbean, to use Cricket World Cup 2007 as an event to galvanize us into
action. Let us all “rally round the West Indies” and make ourselves
winners not only on the cricket field but more importantly, in all the
areas of development.
It is only appropriate that we use a cricketing event as a catalyst
for the sustained development of our Region. Cricket more than anything
else is symbolic of West Indian/Caribbean unity.
This unity and the striving for excellence that our cricketers
achieved during the glory days in the second half of the 20th Century are
essential for the great leap forward we need in the first half of the
21st Century. Let us use the powerful symbolism and oneness of cricket –
including team-work, fair play, pursuing excellence on a level playing
field - to overcome the hurdles we now face.
The Way Forward
For me, the way forward will require the motivation and mobilization of the
people. We need to go back to the drawing board. Our experience in Dominica, to
which I refer again without apology, was that we must put the people first if we
want to move forward.
We must never underestimate the wisdom of the ordinary citizen. Neither
should we underestimate the power of people when they are pulling together. It
is only the people working together who can turn around an economy. It is only
the people working together who can build nations.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the time for us to build institutions of
productivity. This is the time for us to get ordinary people, the majority of
our people involved in the process of establishing a Caribbean nation.
My friends the way forward for us in the Caribbean is to equip our people to
be our masters. We need to embark on a massive educational and training
programme to release their energies. Above all, we must show them how they can
benefit from the changes.
The focus question in all our deliberations should be: How can we make
CARICOM and CSME work to OUR best advantage?
This is a question that I am always posing to my people. Naturally, we in
Dominica have to satisfy ourselves that we are getting the best possible deal.
However, it is the responsibility of all Caribbean peoples to ensure that the
final details of integration arrives at a balance that will meet the needs of
the strong-willed as well as protect the existence of the weak among us.
Ladies and Gentlemen, thank you again for your welcome, for your support for
Dominica and your patience as we prepare ourselves for the great leap forward as
part of a Regional organization.
Despite the challenges before us, from where I stand I visualize a bright
picture of only peace, progress and prosperity redounding from a wider Caribbean
state and to this end you have my resolute and unswerving commitment. Let us
make 2005 a watershed in that relentless movement towards unity.
May God Bless us all. I thank you.