Mr. Chairman, Distinguished Foreign Ministers
Distinguished Delegates Members of the Diplomatic
Corp Representatives of International and Regional
Organisations The Rev. Osbert James of the Grenada
Council of Churches Members of the Media Ladies and
Gentlemen
As Secretary-General of the Caribbean Community,
I am pleased and honoured to address this opening
ceremony of the Ninth Meeting of the Council for
Foreign and Community Relations which we call COFCOR.
I do so however in the shadow of a tragedy that
has served to highlight one of our most formidable
challenges, as a Community and also a threat to our
goal of promoting ourselves as a grouping of stable,
law-abiding nations. The scourge of crime continues
to ravage our societies.
I take this opportunity to offer deepest
condolences on behalf of the Community, the
Secretariat and myself to the Government and people
of Guyana and to the family of the Hon. Satyadeow
Sawh, Minister of Fisheries, Crops, and Livestock
and Acting Minister of Agriculture and the other
three victims so brutally murdered last Saturday
morning. Words cannot adequately express the shock
and the depth of abhorrence that I feel at the
manner of the death of Minister Sawh and all those
who were slain with him. The callous destruction of
human life that has infiltrated our society risks
shredding us of our decency, civility, humanity and
intrinsic Caribbean spirit.
But I have no doubt that Minister Sawh would have
wished us to press on with our task of building a
Caribbean Community worthy of the highest
aspirations of its peoples. And so we shall. In this
regard Grenada provides the historical setting from
which significant thrust in the building of our
Community has been engendered. It was here in 1989
at Grand Anse that the vision and commitment for the
CARICOM Single Market and Economy was laid out.
Today, a distinguished son of the soil Foreign
Minister the Hon. Elvin Nimrod assumes the Chair of
this august body. It is with pleasure that I welcome
him. At the same time, I would like to extend
deepest thanks and appreciation to the outgoing
Chairman, the Hon. Fred Mitchell, Foreign Minister
of the Bahamas, for his energetic stewardship over
the last year which has seen this Council make
significant stride.
A particular pleasure which this Meeting provides
me is the opportunity to welcome back to the
regional Ministerial fold and to the COFCOR in
particular, the Hon. Anthony Hylton, the new
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, of
Jamaica. Welcome Hon. Minister. We look forward to
your well known insightful contributions.
In my address to the VIII Meeting of this Council
last year in Freeport, The Bahamas, I laid
particular stress on the establishment of the
CARICOM Single Market and the expectations which
would arise from its launch. I have not been
disappointed. The Region and the world community at
large have responded most positively to its coming
into being on 1 January 2006 marked by the launch
which took place at the University of the West
Indies, Mona Campus, Jamaica, on 30 January. The
Community must now seize the moment and prepare
itself for the thrust towards the Single Economy in
our quest for sustainable development.
The boldness of our vision must be matched by the
boldness of our action. We have proved to be highly
competitive in many areas not least in business,
academia, the sporting arena and in culture. That
same spirit of competition and enterprise matched by
self belief and confidence which has taken us to
those heights, must now drive our regional movement.
We must inspire our people including our Diaspora to
give of their skills and talents enthusiastically
and we must lure our external partners to
participate with us in the building of a dynamic,
enterprising community.
Honourable Ministers, distinguished delegates,
members of the media, ladies and gentlemen, though
we are small states, we do have an important role to
play in the multilateral arena. Within the last four
months our Community has had fruitful discussions
with US Secretary of State and the US Trade
Representative. Later this week, our Foreign
Ministers will be meeting with the British Foreign
Secretary in Barbados during the Fifth CARICOM-UK
Forum. Today, we expect to have in our midst the
Distinguished Foreign Minister of Brazil and our
officials have already this year met with
representatives from Canada, Japan and Mexico.
At the highest level, in the coming weeks, our
Heads of Government will journey to Spain and then
Austria to meet first with the Prime Minister of
Spain and then with fellow Heads of State and
Government of Latin America and the European Union.
The opportunities are there for us to make our case
and have our voices heard. To do this however, we
must prepare ourselves thoroughly. I am certain that
over the next two days the work of our officials
which preceded this meeting will serve to provide
you Ministers with a solid base for your
discussions, decisions and recommendations to our
Heads of Government.
Among the many relations of the Community, that
with the European Union remains one of our key areas
of focus. It is for that reason that it engaged so
much of your attention during your retreat
yesterday. The new European perspective on the
Caribbean presents both challenges and opportunities
– challenges, especially by the changes it has
wrought to our trading and other historical special
relations; and opportunity by the scope that the new
expanded Europe has provided for this Region to use
its creativity to fashion innovative responses to
this new dispensation.
That response will involve more than the
negotiations of an Economic Partnership Agreement,
even one which seeks to incorporate the development
dimension. It will require as well the instilling of
a new dynamic through a political dialogue that
transcends the narrow confines of regional
integration issues.
The global situation also underlines the need for
a closer working relationship between and among our
Councils in the interest of ensuring cohesive
responses and approaches to the wider global
community. An item on your agenda which will give
further impetus to this thrust is the issue of Joint
Representation.
Cohesion of action among Member States, Councils
and Institutions will undoubtedly form part of this
Council’s discussions when it considers the item
related to the changes in the geopolitical
environment and the influence of energy. These
changes are having profound impact on our small,
vulnerable economies and on our relationships with
external partners, placing even greater emphasis on
the making of concerted efforts towards the
implementation of the Single Market, as well as on
foreign policy formulation and coordination.
Ladies and Gentlemen, June is expected to be
officially designated as Caribbean-American Heritage
month, the US Congress having already so agreed. We
thank those Members of Congress and of the Caribbean
Diaspora who were instrumental in this achievement.
We must now play our part to ensure its success.
Work has also begun on an event that we hope
would be the cornerstone of the celebration of that
event in June 2007. I refer to the initiative for
the holding of a Conference on the Caribbean which
is designed to increase both the awareness and the
influence of the Caribbean in the United States, our
largest trading partner and home to the largest
Caribbean Diaspora. The input of this Council will
be of particular importance to this seminal event.
And here I do hope that the Honourable Dame
Antoinette Billie Miller would forgive me for
publicly commending her for her determined
leadership in pursuit of this initiative.
The highlighting of the Caribbean in this way is,
we hope, a step towards recognition of the special
circumstances of small and vulnerable states in this
era of “bigger is better.”
We also trust that our partners would thereby
better understand the development dimension of their
relationship with the Caribbean Community and work
with us towards building hope and eradicating
despair for we too have a right to life.
I thank you.