I address you today in the name of the people of the Caribbean
Community. In that spirit, I am pleased to recognise that the enterprise we are engaged in
today in Quebec City began in the Caribbean almost two centuries ago.
For it was in Jamaica in 1815 that the great apostle of freedom, Simon
Bolivar, wrote in his famous letter, "More than anyone else, I desire to see America
fashioned into the greatest nation in the world, greatest not so much by virtue of her
area and wealth as, by her freedom and glory".
This Community of the Americas that we, the heirs of Bolivar, are
attempting to build has its roots in, and draws its energy from, a wonderful and a rich
diversity.
When I think back to the first Summit in 1994, I am struck by the
dramatic transformation in the very concept of the Community that we are trying to
achieve. On that occasion, propelled by the wave of trade liberalisation sweeping the
world, we set out primarily to devise a plan for a free trade area of the Americas by the
year 2005.
By our second Summit in Santiago in 1998, we recognised and focused on
education and social issues as key to our progress. Here in Quebec City we intend to make
our vision more holistic by elaborating a plan of action that not only calls for
strenghtening democracy and creating prosperity, but most important of all, realising
human potential.
Let us commit ourselves to making this Summit, the people-centered
summit. It is urgent that we must do so.
The old bipolar world of a cold war balance of terror lies in shambles
about us. Few would lament its passing. Yet, now we are confronted with a set of new
complex issues. We lurch from one international financial crisis to another with
devastating consequences for our economies.
The traffic in illicit drugs and firearms has led to unprecedented
levels of corruption and violent crime, forcing many of our law-abiding citizens to cower
in their homes.
The HIV/AIDS pandemic threatens to wipe out an entire generation of the
young people of our Americas.
And the continued degradation of the environment including the
potentially catastrophic consequences of global warming, hangs like the sword of Damocles
over us.
Compounding all of these, poverty intensifies around us.
As a consequence, our people have begun to lose confidence in the
future. They tend to see only the dark side of globalisation and trade liberalisation.
They fear for jobs lost, cultures destroyed and communities uprooted. They dread the
coming of a "new world", dominated by an impersonal technology and an even more
impersonal market in which the human being is a mere cipher.
And we, the political leaders of the Americas and others, who envision
the enormous potential benefits from the forces of integration and the revolution in
information technology find our voices being increasingly drowned out by the clamour
against globalisation.
And, are we not in some measure to be blamed? Is it not cause for
concern that so far the benefits have been so inequitably distributed? Have we, for the
most part not failed to fashion new instruments for new times?
Our summits therefore have an importance that goes beyond Declarations
and Action Plans. They are the only serious attempt to fashion new forms of lasting
hemispheric cooperation to deal with the complex new world around us.
Indeed, we are entering an era that holds enormous and empowering
promise. But that promise rests on the precarious edifice of societies and relations
between societies, fractured by inequities.
The distinguished Canadian economist Gerald Helleiner has urged that the
global economy can be and must be "civilised". We all must surely share that
view!
As leaders of the Americas, our challenge is to ensure that the fruits
of our efforts are widely and equitably distributed, both within and among our nations. To
achieve this we must fashion a hemispheric community based on respect for diversity and on
the full involvement of our people.
There can, however, be no community without communication and
interaction. We must therefore set as our goal, the access of all citizens of the Americas
to the increased flows of information, facilitated by the new technology. Our commitment
to connecting the Americas will go a long way to making this Quebec City Summit a
people-centered Summit.
The respect for our diversity also requires that we recognise and take
into account the different levels and patterns of development in the hemisphere, paying
particular regard to the special situation of our smaller societies.
What we are attempting to do through these Summits is to create a
Hemispheric Community of a scale and of an intensity never before contemplated by man.
It will be a Community that will bring into the same economic and social
space the world's most powerful, and some of the world's poorest and most vulnerable
societies.
In trodding a similar path, though faced with less disparities, the
European Community saw the need and the wisdom to create special financial and other
mechanisms to harmoniously and beneficially integrate its poorer societies fully into its
community.
Nothing less is required if we are to build a successful Community of
the Americas.
We in the Caribbean remain committed to a realistic timetable for the
negotiation of the FTAA by 2005.
For us, however, the creation of the FTAA is more than just about trade,
it is more than just about getting tariffs and other marketing mechanisms right. It is
quintessentially about expanding the horizons for economic and investment opportunities
for all of us.
Our Caribbean, like the Mediterranean, has found itself repeatedly at
the crossroads of history.
Yet through the trauma of genocide, wars and invasions, slavery and
indentured servitude that is our history, we have not only survived, but have been
extraordinarily creative as a people in fashioning a community of nations marked by
freedom, justice and cooperation in the face of a stern adversity.
Our Caribbean has a vital contribution to make to the creation of the
community of the Americas. Our long history of stable democratic governance, our progress
in establishing societies rooted in social justice and respect for human rights, and our
determination to forge communities based on ethnic and cultural diversity, are assets
which we proudly bring to that wider hemispheric process.
The Caribbean's democratic tradition has especially been exemplified by
respect for and tolerance of differences of opinions. That experience leads us to the
strong belief that we can and must fashion a hemispheric community from which no one is
excluded, least of all in the name of democracy. The time must certainly have come for
engaging Cuba constructively in the creation of a comprehensive community of the Americas.
Let us therefore not shirk our historic responsibility here in Quebec
City. The challenges we face are daunting.
Let us make it our responsibility at this Summit to reassure all the
peoples of the Americas that we are sensitive to the problems facing us; that we have the
courage to tackle them; and that we can summon the political will to provide the resources
for resolving them.
We can do so not just by creating a free trade area of the Americas, but
a hemispheric community based on tolerance and respect for each other; a community that
will realise the full human potential of all the citizens of the Americas; a community
that will transform, if I may be permitted to paraphrase the words of Martin Luther King
Jr., "... the jangling discord of our nations into a beautiful symphony of
brotherhood".
On behalf of the Caribbean Community, I thank the Government of Canada
for the opportunity of meeting in this beautiful, historic city and of experiencing the
warm and generous hospitality of its people. Quebec City symbolises the cultural and
linguistic diversity that enriches our hemisphere. It is not always easy to create unity
out of diversity. Ask any Canadian. But it is more than worth the effort. I have no doubt
that our meeting here will be inspired by these values.
I thank you.