News
release 142/2006
(05 July 2006)
The Chairman of the Conference of Heads of
Government of the Caribbean Community, Prime
Minister Dr. Denzil Douglas
Heads of State and Heads of Government
The Secretary-General of CARICOM, His Excellency
Edwin Carrington
Ministers of Government
Members of the CARICOM Secretariat
Representatives of Regional and International
Institutions
Specially Invited Guests
Members of the Media
Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen
Trinidad and Tobago has been honoured to hold the
Chairmanship of the Caribbean Community over the
past six months. The period produced one of the most
significant steps forward in the integration
movement. This was the establishment of the CARICOM
Single Market. It was the culmination of many years
of great effort along the long road from Grand Anse
in 1989.
But even with that achievement, our joy was
incomplete. Only six members were able to board the
new boat on January 1st. Now that the rest of the
family will take that critical step forward, we can
sail on with greater momentum.
But we are not yet at full steam. The CARICOM
engine will not be firing on all pistons for some
time yet. Not until we get to the Single Economy. It
is this destination which will provide us with the
full throttle to ensure that our nations can succeed
in the ongoing and increasingly competitive global
race for development.
By itself, the Single Market is inadequate to
stir the development that we need. Were it the full
answer, we would have already been far ahead. The
fact is, significant aspects of the Market were in
place before January 1, 2006. We already had free
trade in goods, and some measure of liberalized
capital flows as a result of our decisions based on
global consensus and demands. The bugbear is and
continues to be the free movement of labour.
We, in CARICOM, must shed our mental shackles on
this important matter. It is most essential for the
way forward. Notwithstanding technological progress,
human capital continues to be the most important
factor of the productive process. No progress is
possible without the human mind.
And it is in our mind where the change must take
place. We must change our attitudes to one another
in fundamental ways in the Caribbean. Support of the
cricket team doth not a West Indian civilization
make. We cannot continue to merely come to the game,
applaud the potential glory of the West Indies and
retire to pavilions limited by our narrow
shorelines; taking comfort and seeking raison d'etre
in our separate flags and anthems, and in our small
sovereignties.
CARICOM must wake up and see itself from head to
toe, and must open its heart to its full reality.
This is the way to truly explore the possibilities
beyond the boundary. As mundane as it sounds, and in
human affairs, the grand almost always begins with
the ordinary, it is the Single Economy that will
take us there.
The Single Market still leaves us in our little
cocoons. It is the one economy which will unleash
the energies and potentials of the people and make
their unity unstoppable. When nations trade with one
another, there is understanding and harmony based on
mutual interest. But it remains harmony from a
distance. But when people with a common history live
and work together, in a common geographical or
psychological space, community and family develop
their fuller meaning.
The Europeans are aware of it. They know that in
the full face of various needs made single, all
obstacles must eventually give way, including failed
or dangerous ideology, crippling cultural beliefs,
insularity, and limited social and political
consciousness in people and leaders. It is not
surprising therefore, that in spite of a floundered
first attempt, their proposed constitution is still
very much on the agenda. It will remain there, I can
assure you, until the European Project, a United
States of Europe, in some form or fashion, is
satisfactorily realized.
But we are still so hesitant about the free
movement of a small category of workers; when what
is required is full freedom of movement in a managed
borderlessness. Our people must be able to move,
work and live freely in the Region. Without that
freedom, our integration process will stagnate and
decline.
We must look at the world which is indeed
instructive. Today, as a result of many decades of
migration in the last century, and now pushed
further by globalisation, demographic realities in
the developed world, and desperation in the poorer
countries, cosmopolitanism has been incrementally
breaking down barriers in the most stratified and
xenophobic of societies. Societies are changing,
inevitably, and with an increasing willingness.
People are on the move.
History is also most instructive. No barrier,
natural or artificial has ever been strong enough to
stop the march of human feet. Not since homo-sapiens
stood erect and surveyed the landscape before him.
Who were the people whom wayward Columbus met when
he stumbled here? Were they originally from these
parts or did they, in a process of hundreds of
years, cross the ice from places thousands of miles
away? Where are they now, and who are we who have
inherited this place from them? The point is, no
country is the product of anyone place or time.
Neither is the individual. We each carry in our
genes the sum total of the entire evolutionary
experience of humankind.
Therefore, culture should illuminate and liberate
rather than blind us to the ever beckoning oneness.
This applies to all of humanity. The world has
always been wracked by the conflict of differences
based, inter alia, on place, name, religion and
complexion. How absolutely silly and tremendously
dangerous it has all been. Sadly, and most
tragically, it continues. Today, with all the
trappings of civilization, the bloody mayhem
persists. Babes in arms, pregnant mothers, children
at play, the old and infirm, continue to be decimated
and splintered by bombs and guns produced by
differences; that amazing failure of humanity to
recognize the oneness. Sadly, so much of culture
produces myopia rather than enlightenment.
It has to be stopped. It is everybody's
responsibility. We must all contribute to the
cessation of our destruction. Can the Caribbean, in
a state of fragmentation, or of only potential
togetherness, exercise any influence on this eternal
global malaise? We must certainly put our house in
order. But now, more than ever, we need to get our
hearts together.
Colleagues, Ladies and Gentlemen, this is the
philosophical basis on which I think we must proceed
in this new century. Mere functionality could never
have sufficed to weld our nations together. It is
only soul that could do it. And we shouldn't
hesitate to seriously consider the charge that our
integration movement has so far lacked soul.
But there are encouraging signs. We have
established the Single Market and the plan is for
the one economy by 2008. Also, facing our unique
situation where some of our Lesser Developed
Countries enjoy a higher per capita income than some
of our MDCs, we are now moving towards the
operationalisation of the regional Development Fund
based on a formula put forward, in part, by the
Caribbean Development Bank, and endorsed by CARICOM
Ministers of Finance. Additionally, we are committed
to helping the people of Haiti by providing a pool
of technical expertise, and most importantly
continuing to vigorously lobby the international
community to keep its promise to assist this country
in the process of rebuilding and recovery.
And it is to the international community that I
now turn. Clearly we must think again on our Foreign
policy. For sometime, we have known that the
traditional approach will no longer suffice. The
world has changed. We are no longer of strategic
importance. And this is becoming clearer in very
stark ways. We see promises made being nonchalantly
disregarded, like, for example, the offer to assist
in our regional security system, especially for the
World Cup Cricket in 2007. The idea was that we
would use this opportunity to not only put in place
the security infrastructure for the international
event, but also for the enduring need to protect our
small nations from the ravages of multinational
criminal networks and their illicit trade,
particularly in drugs and arms. Now the hope has
almost completely faded that promises will be kept
to assist in this US$100M project. It is surprising to say the least, since
the security and stability of the Caribbean should
be of concern to all of us in the hemisphere.
What are we then to do? Nowadays, benevolence is
being increasingly replaced by reciprocity, with the
extra quarter-mile being walked for the sake of
window dressing, or from dying pangs of conscience.
This is the reality of present international life.
We shouldn't complain. Not after almost half a
century of Independence.
Should we really expect a full hand from across
the Atlantic for example, when bombs explode in
Madrid and London, and immigrant rage erupts in
Paris? It seems vulnerability now applies to
everybody. Besides, there are hundreds of millions
starving and diseased throughout the Third World
through endemic poverty, constant conflict, natural
disasters or grave political mismanagement. Global
warming and the spread of disease threaten the very
existence of humanity; whilst the Middle East and
one half of the Korean peninsula daily increase
fears of Armageddon. The attention is focused
elsewhere.
The question we must ask ourselves is: Where does
the small, peaceful Caribbean fit into this growing
global network of existing and impending disaster?
We seem to be the victims of both our smallness and
our stability. As long as we do not threaten anyone
or anything, we could stew and be dismissed as not
being on the priority list of global concerns,
political or humanitarian. We are no longer of
strategic importance. I could, therefore, hear some
whisperings across the Caribbean Sea, "Oh for the
days of the Cold War."
It is a whisper from the past. It comes from the
mindset when we were, in a paradox of comfort and
suffocation, sandwiched between global blocs
competing for dominance. In that era, all that was
required in foreign policy was to sniff the breeze
to guess the way the wind was blowing. Well, mighty
winds of change have indeed blown, fuelled, inter alia, by the information revolution, and they have
dismantled barriers and exposed ideological failures
as well as our own bareness.
Globalisation has consequently been upon us for
some time as well as the concept, some say
pernicious, of the level playing field. How level it
really is continues to be the subject of voluminous
discourse, oral and otherwise.
But amidst the chatter, what is clear is that we
must seek to diversify our foreign relations as much
as we try with our economies. To this end, we need
to ask some important questions. What, honestly, is
the status of our relations with Latin America,
beyond the diplomatic and paper agreements on trade
and technical co-operation? Are we thinking of Asia,
where two emerging giants bring the realistic
promise of a shift, or better still, a diffusion in
the balance of world power; and could we be
thankfully heading for a world of multi-polarity?
And what about Africa? Have we recognized that this
continent, in spite of its multifarious problems,
now promises economic growth, market dynamism and
emergence from its historical problems?
Clearly, we must start thinking again. We need to
deepen friendships in our own neighbourhood and
beyond, so that when one door is closed, either
through arrogance, indifference or domestic
preoccupation, we could make a call across the
Atlantic or the Pacific. We must still go north, but
we should also be able to head south, east or west
of our borders. We should, in fact, be able to go
anywhere. That is the essence of the independence in
our international relationships. At the same time,
let me sound this very serious warning. In the
anxiety generated by our vulnerability, we should be
very wary of tying our fortunes to any hegemonic
intent or anachronistic ideologies.
In the final analysis, Colleagues, Ladies and
Gentlemen, as we have always known, it is to our
very selves we must turn. But this need for
significant self-reliance must no longer remain just
an idea, verbalized at appropriate fora. It must
permeate our Capitals and Cabinets and become a
deeply internal objective and reality. Make no
mistake, it deals with the very basics of food
shelter and clothing for the people whom we serve.
Some may say that after so many years, nothing much
has changed.
But very important developments have taken place.
Made possible by years of great industry, we now
have the Single Market and with it the unprecedented
opportunity to move further than we have ever gone
before. And so I return to where I started, which is
the need to move with commitment and expedition to
the establishment of the regional Single Economy.
The target is 2008. It is this endeavour which
will take us nearest to our full strength. It is
through this effort that our Region could become
more stable and secure, with its own inner dynamism,
propelled from within; an attractive partner in
foreign relations; influential enough at the global
level for our own sake, and to make a stronger
contribution to a better world.
We started well on January 1st, 2006. Let us
complete the year, and those ahead, with an unchanging
priority. This is the inner strength of CARICOM,
which will certainly come, for the great benefit of
all, from the establishment of the regional Single
Economy.
Ladies and Gentlemen, Trinidad and Tobago has
been privileged to hold the Chairmanship of CARICOM
for the past six months. I thank my Colleague Heads,
the Secretary-General, Ministers and the entire
CARICOM Secretariat for their excellent co-operation
during this time.
God Bless you all. God Bless all our nations.
Thank you very much.