Press release 19/2007
(25 January 2007)Assistant Secretary-General and
Representatives of the United Nations and its
Specialised Agencies
Colleagues and Representatives of CARICOM
Associated Institutions
Members of the Media
I extend a warm welcome to our visiting
delegations both from CARICOM Regional institutions
as well as from the United Nations and its
Specialised Agencies, to the Headquarters of the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM). This is the fourth
meeting between the United Nations system and the
Caribbean Community Secretariat and institutions
associated with the Community and the first to be
held at the headquarters of the Caribbean Community.
We hope that the working environment which you will
enjoy here will serve to advance our discourse and
attention to our common aim - sustainable
development for the well-being of the people of this
Region.
We last met three years ago. We gather today by
virtue of Resolution 59/138 entitled: “Cooperation
between the United Nations and the Caribbean
Community (CARICOM)” adopted by the United
Nations General Assembly in 2004 during its 59th
Session and which recommended:
“… that the fourth general meeting
between representatives of the Caribbean
Community and its associated institutions and of
the United Nations System be held … in order to
review and appraise progress in the
implementation of the agreed areas and issues
and to hold consultations on such additional
measures and procedures as may be required to
facilitate and strengthen cooperation between
the two organizations“
To us, colleagues, is entrusted the task and
responsibility of developing a work plan that will
facilitate our cooperation.
Despite the classification of many Caribbean
states as middle income developing countries, the
reality is that the gains that the countries of the
Region from time to time celebrate are tenuous. They
are constantly threatened by the erosion of
multilateral diplomacy --- a global principle dear
to democratic states and critical to small states
like ours; by the widening of economic -- and by
extension social -- disparities through, inter alia,
the erosion of preferential trade arrangements. The
sustainable development of the Caribbean Community
is menaced by the construction of global economic
structures which, in the name of trade
liberalisation promote free but, some argue,
unfair trade, and by galloping technological
progress that leaves them behind.
We are threatened by insecurity - be it HIV/AIDS,
or the traffic in illicit arms, or terrorism; by
environmental degradation, and ultimately by social
dislocation and unrest. Notwithstanding the
internationally lauded results of the PANCAP, the
HIV/AIDS virus continues to affect the most
productive of our citizens. The Caribbean still has
a high rate of infection, which, in combination with
other risk factors, contributes to the undermining
of our gains in the attainment of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDG). Added to this is the
alarmingly increasing significance of the impact of
non-communicable diseases on our most experienced
and productive age group, the 35-55 age cohort.
The truth is that our small size - absolute and
relative - forces us to play dangerous games with
our very existence. We play David to the Goliath of
globalisation and dodge the bullets fired by the
vicissitudes of nature. Most recently Grenada’s
catastrophic encounter with Hurricane Ivan and
Haiti’s repeated incidents of devastating floods are
only two recent reminders of how easily we can lose.
Nevertheless, we move forward, encouraged by the
hope that lives in a potential we have seen assert
itself convincingly every now and then, in the
resilience of the Grenadian and Haitian people, in
the PANCAP successes, in the inauguration of the
Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ).
CARICOM’s daunting task is, through its own
efforts and global partnerships like those enjoyed
with the UN, to counter the threats and access the
promises of the evolving global reality on behalf of
the Caribbean people. CARICOM is doing so through
ambitious integration architecture - the Single
Market and Economy (CSME) - and the UN continues to
faithfully accompany the Community as it strengthens
itself to face the treacherous currents of the
global sea change that is globalisation. Thus Member
States continue to distil their disparate voices
into the single voice of the Council for Foreign
and Community Relations (COFCOR), leveraging the
collective influence of the Region to promote the
interests of its small state membership in
hemispheric, regional and international fora and to
proclaim the Region’s fierce advocacy of
multilateralism as the key to the maintenance of an
equitable world society.
The Council for Trade and Economic Development
(COTED) implements the enabling framework for
optimum production and trade within the Region so
that, as a unit, the Caribbean can present itself as
a viable trading partner and investment location for
world players. This Council also represents the
interests of the Region on such diverse issues as
protection of the Caribbean Sea or of the global
environment.
The Council for Human and Social Development (COHSOD)
addresses the health, education, youth, gender,
sport, labour and community development issues and
objectives of the Region, as well as the cultural
development and social interaction of the Caribbean
people. This Council is currently in the process of
developing relevant social indicators that will
allow the Community to better track its progress and
identify its lacunae as regards social development.
More recently, the newly created CARICOM
Council of Ministers responsible for National
Security and Law and Enforcement, through its
implementation arm, the CARICOM Implementation
Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS), is breathing
life and efficiency into the CARICOM Regional Action
Agenda on Crime and Security as mandated by a
Conference of Heads of Government, concerned with
the escalation of violence and security threats.
Our Regional agencies represented here today in
the presence of CARDI, CARICAD, CCCCC, CCL, CDERA,
CEHI, CFNI, CIMH, CMO CRFM, CTU, UWI and UG, were
established by the Community to support the
development of new policies in their respective
areas of expertise as well as to provide technical
support to governments in the implementation of
policies adopted. These agencies are an integral arm
of regional development.
Perhaps at no other time in history has the
interrelation and interdependency of development
issues been as pronounced as now. As a result, in no
other time in the Region’s history has the
Community’s approach to integration been so
decidedly interdisciplinary. Poverty Reduction, food
security, agriculture, environment, gender, security
and governance issues - both internally and
externally such as in the IFIs and UN - are now
systematically treated as crosscutting themes as
opposed to development objectives in themselves. The
CSME construct and modus operandi reflects this
paradigm shift in implementing integration policy.
In this approach, the Community’s organs,
institutions and associate institutions are called
upon to work in ever more intimate, flexible and
creative synergies.
Allow me briefly to expand on the CSME and its
objectives. The CARICOM Single Market and Economy is
intended to create a single enlarged economic space
characterised by free movement of all the factors of
production, a common external trade policy and
coordination of macro-economic and sectoral policy
coordination, but also enhanced functional
cooperation and foreign policy coordination. In
other words, the CSME seeks to rally the Community’s
peoples in and across every sphere of activity to
collectively edify the Community socially,
culturally, economically, politically, legally and
institutionally, so that, as a single regional unit,
the Community can stand strong before the
international community and adapt effectively to the
ever changing international environment.
The legal underpinning of the CSME is the Revised
Treaty of Chaguaramas, which is augmented by various
decisions of the Conference of Heads of Government.
To this end, the Community is in the advanced stages
of establishing the legal and institutional
framework which requires that new harmonised laws be
blended into the domestic law of signatory Member
States. With the establishment of the Caribbean
Court of Justice (CCJ), significant progress has
been made with respect to the dispute settlement
regime. However, while the Court is to pronounce on
interpretation of the Treaty there is still need for
the establishment of an adequate dispute resolution
mechanism that could swiftly dispense of trade
disputes and therefore facilitate the flow of goods
and services in the single market in the fastest
possible time.
As regards other institutional arrangements to
facilitate the harmonisation process, a number of
key regional structures have to be established.
These include the CARICOM Regional Organisation for
Standards and Quality (CROSQ), to be followed by the
Competition Commission, and the Caribbean
Agricultural Health and Food Safety Agency (CAHFSA).
I should point out also that the focus has not only
been on creating internal structures in the CSME. As
far as market access for the Region’s exports is
concerned, the Caribbean Regional Negotiation
Machinery (CRNM) has been established to defend the
issues of concern and advance the Region’s trade
interests in external trade negotiations.
Ladies and gentlemen, on the first of this month,
the Single Market celebrated its first
birthday, having come into effect on 1 January 2006,
and is now in operation among 12 Member States.
Haiti, The Bahamas and Montserrat are not yet
signatories to the CSME but they are still part of
the CARICOM family, and it is hoped that in due
course they will be part of this integrated market.
The CARICOM Single Market essentially creates a
single contiguous market for CARICOM goods and
services. It is a space characterised by
non-discrimination between Member State goods,
services, service providers and purchasers - no
quotas, no duties, no discrimination against
non-national job seekers in eligible professions -
and by a single policy concerning the purchase of
goods and services from third countries as
symbolised in the first instance by a Common
External Tariff (CET).
The novelty of the Single Market, as opposed to
its predecessor the Common Market, is the new
freedom of circulation. It guarantees services and
the factors of production that constitute service
provision, notably labour. Thus, whereas free
movement of goods and the CET existed under the
Common Market, free movement of labour and
non-discrimination based on nationality amongst
approved categories of professionals are ensured
under the Single Market.
Concomitant with this right are the rights of
establishment and contingent rights of the newly
mobile CARICOM labour force. Laws ensuring the right
of establishment for CARICOM nationals are currently
being enacted into local legislation by some Member
States and the contingent rights for authorised
categories of professionals are currently being
implemented.
As regards implementation of the Single
Economy, its policy framework is expected to be
completed by 2008.
Work is actively being undertaken in two main
areas identified in the Revised Treaty: in the first
instance, the creation of a Macroeconomic Policy
framework involving work on monetary policy
coordination, financial policy harmonisation,
capital market integration, investment and
incentives policy harmonisation; and in the second
instance the coordination of sectoral policies,
including agriculture, fisheries, sustainable
development, environment and more recently energy.
All CARICOM Member States are small and extremely
vulnerable. All need assistance at the country and
sector levels in implementing the requirements of
the Revised Treaty. It is expected that the
adjustment process will be cushioned by the creation
of the CARICOM Development Fund (CDF) and the
Regional Development Agency (RDA) as well as with
the continued support of the United Nations and the
Region’s other development partners.
As regards the CDF, the Conference of Heads of
Government recently agreed that the Fund would have
an initial capital base of USD 250 million and would
be established by Charter by July 2007. The RDA,
which is expected to become operational later this
year, will be tasked with monitoring and
facilitating the full functioning of article 142 of
the Revised Treaty which speaks to assistance to be
provided to ‘disadvantaged countries, regions and
sectors’ to allow them to become ‘economically
viable and competitive by appropriate interventions
of a transitional or temporary nature’.
I have sought to put into perspective and to
demonstrate the importance of the deliberations
which will commence this morning. As I said earlier,
the UN System, through the provision both of
finances and expertise, has been supportive of
CARICOM’s efforts to implement the CSME and thereby
respond to the global environment. I must make
special mention of the UN’s ongoing assistance to
our sister state Haiti, particularly through
MINUSTAH, as she strives to take up her place in the
Community and the world, and to Grenada when that
state suffered the devastation of Hurricane Ivan.
Our agenda will include the strategic objectives
of the Region in order to facilitate an even more
responsive programme of cooperation for the next two
years. In this respect, this meeting will discuss,
inter alia, Implementation of the CARICOM
Single Market and Development of the Framework for
the Single Economy; Institutional Development and
Strengthening of the Community; Advancing Human and
Social Development; Enhancing the Strategic Position
of CARICOM within the Hemispheric and Global
Environment; Strengthening Governance and Security
within the Community; Information and Communication
Technology for Development; and, of course, Resource
Mobilisation.
All of the activities undertaken thus far and
planned by the Community in collaboration with the
UN and other international partners are of course
consistent with the Community’s efforts to meet
international goals and standards most recently
captured by the MDGs and most enduringly enshrined
in the UN Charter. At the end of the day however,
through these meetings and others, CARICOM seeks
simply to improve the standards of living and
quality of life of its people.
In conclusion and on behalf of the Region and
Caribbean Community representatives, I wish to thank
the UN and its specialised agencies for attending
this important meeting.
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