Madame Chair
Most Honourable Professor Sir Kenneth Hall, Former
Governor-General of Jamaica
Executive Director and Other Board Members of the
Caribbean Centre for Development Administration (CARICAD)
Professors Ralph Carnegie and Winston Anderson
Assistant Secretary-General LaRocque and other
Distinguished Participants
Ladies and Gentlemen
Good morning and a warm and hearty welcome to you
all to the CARICOM Headquarters. The
Secretary-General of the Caribbean Community has
frequently been referred to as the Region’s top
public service officer. I have never been quite sure
what that means. In any case, speaking for myself, I
have enough responsibilities as it is for me to
consider accepting the weight of the entire regional
public services to add to them! What I do admit to,
however, as head of the CARICOM Secretariat is that
under the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas, with the
Secretariat being the principal administrative organ
of the Community, I take great pride in being its
Chief Executive Officer and servant of the regional
public.
In that context, notwithstanding the stresses and
strains of the recently concluded Thirtieth Meeting
of the Conference of Heads of Government of the
Community and today’s market crises, I could not see
my way to refuse this request to address you - the
Caribbean Centre for Development Administration (CARICAD),
who have been tasked with the critical role of
modernising the public sector in the Caribbean.
This, even more so as your topic today melds two
issues which are close to my heart, Regional
Integration and the Public Service.
Just four days ago here in Guyana, the Heads of
Government of the Community were engrossed in
discussion over a number of matters which they
expect would move the process of Regional
Integration forward. On one of those key issues the
Communiqué issued at the end of the Meeting stated
as follows: “Heads of Government further agreed
on the importance of training and sensitising
Immigration Officers on the implementation of the
Region’s approach to free movement and hassle free
travel.”
I use that illustration to highlight the fact
that public service officials, public officers if
you may, are at the forefront of the integration
arrangements. They are truly in a position to make a
difference, negative or positive, to the
implementation of the decisions of Heads of
Government. This makes the role of CARICAD all the
more critical and empowers your Mission of “Improving
Government for the People of the Caribbean”,
thereby giving meaning to the following provisions
of Article 76 (c) of the Revised Treaty of
Chaguaramas: “COTED shall promote the
modernisation of Government bureaucracies by, inter
alia, encouraging cost effectiveness in the delivery
of services to the public.”
Madame Executive Director, your Organisation
started some 29 years ago on its monumental task of
transforming and modernising the public sector in
the Caribbean. Along the way, in keeping with your
modernising mandate, you have been given the
responsibility for the promotion of e-government, to
complement e-commerce, one of the built-in agenda
items referred to in Article 239 of the Revised
Treaty, as a vehicle for Public Sector Modernisation.
I refer to e-government primarily because in the
context of Regional Integration, the enhancement of
the ability of our public sector to communicate
effectively with each other is at the core of the
contribution that the sector can make to the
advancement of regional integration. The increased
use of technology which, among other things, would
enable this effective communication has been
recognised as one of the main drivers of the 21st
century Community by our Heads of Government.
I am therefore, pleased to note that your
organisation has enunciated a Caribbean e-government
strategy 2009-2012 as part of a wider e-governance
project and importantly, the introduction to that
document states: “e-Government has the greatest
potential to revolutionize the performance of
government and revitalize democracy. E-Government
can fundamentally recast the connection between
people and their government and between Governments
of the region. It can make government far more
responsive to the needs of the people and greatly
improve transactions between them.”
However, Ladies and Gentlemen, as important as
the technology undoubtedly is in connecting our
Region, the key core factor is the human resource.
Unless there is a commitment to the idea of Regional
Integration by the people on the front line, no
amount of technology will move the process forward.
Two critical words in the quotation from the
recent Communiqué of Heads of Government must be
emphasised – training and sensitisation.
These do not apply only to immigration officers but
to all public officers. The sensitisation to the
decisions taken and training in how to implement
them, are the professional elements but there is
also the human element which requires an
understanding of the vital importance of integration
for our survival and prosperity. Our quest for a
viable, prosperous, secure and sustainable Community
for All requires all hands on deck.
The public service must be made aware of their
integral role in advancing the objectives and
implementing the decisions of the Community. The
Secretariat and the regional institutions have their
role in facilitating and co-ordinating but cannot
implement at the national level. Whether it is in
agriculture, free movement, contingent rights,
security, investment, rights of the child or
examinations, implementation remains the province of
the Member State.
There must be an understanding and acceptance
that the national goals are not distinct from the
Community’s goals and, that there is no
contemplation of replacing national public services
with a gigantic regional public service. The
objective is for a seamless space that will
strengthen the parts to ensure a solid and stronger
whole. To achieve that, the national public services
across the Community, should all be operating on the
same basic principles in the conduct of their
duties.
CARICAD’s work should therefore be instrumental
in establishing that coherence among your principal
stakeholders which could only redound to the benefit
of the integration process and therefore to the
Community as a whole. In that regard, I note that
you have been closely involved with other Community
Agencies and Institutions, including the CARICOM
Single Market and Economy (CSME) Unit of the
Secretariat and soon, the OTN which like you, are
based in Barbados. There is no doubt that this close
collaboration, which I have observed, results from
the work that you have been doing with the public
services of the Region, and given the high degree of
inter-ministerial coordination which is necessary at
the national level, to implement the provisions of
the CSME.
I am advised also that some of the activities
that have been undertaken in collaboration with the
CSME Unit include Joint Missions to Member States to
facilitate sensitisation and consultation;
Partnering on the implementation of the Public
Education Programme and most importantly, membership
of the Project Steering Committee for the CSME
Component of the CARICOM-Canada Trade and
Competitiveness Project - a project which deals with
administrative reform. I look forward to this
continued collaboration and urge that there be
cohesion as a structured and agreed upon approach is
critical to the success of this project.
I recall that in this very room last July 31, a
Memorandum of Understanding was signed between
CARICAD and the Implementation Agency for Crime and
Security (IMPACS) which among other things, catered
for the training of immigration officers, one of the
measures mentioned in the recent Communiqué of the
Conference of Heads of Government. This will become
even more relevant given the imminent introduction
of the CARIPASS.
Your Excellency, Distinguished Professors, Madame
Executive Director, Board Members, participants, all
in closing I would like to leave you with the
thoughts of an elder statesman of the Caribbean
Community to guide you during your seminar and
beyond: “regional economic integration is an
imperative; the assertion of our united voice as
sovereign nations in the global arena singing from
the same hymn sheet is the only way for any of us to
be heard in the global din. As a result, our own
national self-interest demands that we widen, deepen
and strengthen the Caribbean Community. There simply
is no other way out especially in these rough and
perilous times.”
So said the Most Honourable Percival J. Patterson
and so say I.
I thank you.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org