President Bharrat Jagdeo of the Cooperative Republic of
Guyana and Incoming Chairman of the Caribbean
Community
Colleague Heads of State and Government of CARICOM
Secretary General of CARICOM
Ministers of Government and Members of Parliament
Specially invited Guests and Members of the
Diplomatic Corps
Distinguished Delegates
Representatives of the media
Ladies and Gentlemen
I first visited this country almost 20 years ago
and was immediately struck by especially the
architectural similarities between Georgetown and
Belize City. But it was more than just the
commonalities of timber houses on stilts, or our
both being mainland territories of wood and water,
that made me feel there was an unusual kinship
between Belize and Guyana.
In the 80’s I was a new Foreign Minister and not
much newer than my country, which had only obtained
independence in 1981. That independence had been
long delayed by the claim of the Republic of
Guatemala to all of Belize. And when that
independence finally came it owed much to the
diplomatic support of a number of countries. Among
them few were as unstinting, as unrelenting, as
Guyana.
Perhaps this remarkable solidarity was due to
another shared characteristic, since Guyana was
itself the subject of unjust pretensions to portions
of its national territory. In any case the fervour
with which Guyana espoused Belize’s cause was the
start of a special friendship that I believe endures
to this day. You will understand why it is, then,
that I do far more than engage in niceties of
protocol when I say that I feel very much at home
here and it is wonderful to be back in Guyana.
Mr. Chairman: I look back on the past six months
ago during which I had the honour of Chairing
CARICOM, and I am not dismayed. The Community had
the privilege of hosting, in Trinidad and Tobago,
the April Summit of the Americas, and we did so to
deserved acclaim. Our diplomatic skills,
particularly those of Prime Minister Manning, were
much in evidence. And it pleases me to think that it
was our principled, but carefully deployed, position
on Cuba that was the platform for the later
rescission of our sister country’s OAS suspension.
The Inter-Sessional meeting in Belize also
produced a recommitment to CARICOM's Single Market
and Economy, though not an unthinking one. There was
a frank assessment of the continuing challenges, and
a candid concession that the way ahead will throw up
obstacles that will be almost Bunyanesque. But there
was unanimity in the determination to stay the
course.
Our integration enterprise, though, has been made
even more difficult by the global financial and
economic crisis. The trajectory of CARICOMs effort
to deal with this was initiated as early as the
Bahamas Meeting at the start of 2008, and has
accelerated as the crisis deepened.
While we have not met with anything like the
success we would have wished, some of what we did
was truly noteworthy. As an example, cash-strapped
OECS governments were nevertheless able to bail out
an international bank. And coordinated regional
action is helping to ameliorate the worst effects of
the Clico failure.
At the recent special conclave in Port of Spain,
we also agreed a number of new measures to broaden
our intervention efforts. These include the pooling,
streamlining and more effective disbursement of
regional resources; the mounting of missions to
non-traditional sources to augment those resources;
the diversification and reshaping of our tourism
product; and the restructuring of our economies to,
inter alia, exploit the comparative advantage
our language, literacy and trainability give us with
respect to ICT.
There is, of course, one clear reason for the
exiguousness of our success in combating the
dislocation that the global crisis has visited upon
us. It is the failure of the developed world, as the
progenitor of the crisis, to discharge their
responsibility to us. Oscar Wilde once said that all
bad poetry, and presumably all bad art, is sincere.
But the song and dance latterly produced by the
developed countries regarding the measures necessary
to repay their crisis-engendered debt to us, does
not appear to possess even the dubious merit of
sincerity.
At the just concluded UN conference on the
crisis, CARICOM once again played its part.
Underscoring the fact that we have long since come
fully of age, it was Ambassador Gonsalves of St.
Vincent and the Grenadines who helped lead the work
that produced the outcome document. And CARICOM was
represented by five Prime Ministers. Developed
country Heads stayed away en masse though, resulting
in even greater skepticism as to the materialization
of the long-promised increase in multilateral
assistance to small countries.
It is the same thing with climate change. For our
small island and coastal low-lying countries, this
is quite literally a matter of life and death. But
the developed world seems to have great difficulty
in even agreeing the necessary adaptation and
mitigation measures, much less in funding them. In
the United States the CAP and Trade Bill passed by
the House is thin and wafery, milk and water. But
even its remarkable retreat from campaign goals will
not give it much chance of passage in the Senate.
Instead, on this issue the Right seems resurgent.
Emboldened by a new clutch of pseudo-scientific
enablers, the Right is making public, strident, even
gleeful, denials that global warming exists. The
auguries are distinctly not favourable for success
at December’s Copenhagen summit.
But Naipaul said a long time ago that the world
is what it is; that men who are nothing, or allow
themselves to become nothing, have no place in it.
Well, we in the Caribbean say to the developed
countries, to what the President of Ecuador called
“the clan of the powerful,” that we refuse to become
nothing. We will make fast our place in the world,
our role in the universal project. In our struggle
we will make common cause with, and be buoyed by,
the similar determination of those that are forging
a new Latin American consensus for change. But most
of all we will be lifted by our own talents, our own
proud spirit.
The earth in these climes is especially rich, and
natural bounty our God-given endowment. Despite the
hammer blows of this unprecedented crisis then,
bright prospects and sunlit vistas will continue to
be a part of both our topography and our psychology.
I thank you.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org