News release 68/2006
(24 April 2006)
Mr. Chairman, the Honourable Elvin Nimrod, Minister of
Foreign Affairs and International Trade of Grenada
Colleague Ministers
Rev. Osbert James
Secretary General of the Caribbean Community
Excellencies and other Government representatives
Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen
I am honoured to address you today as the
Outgoing Chairman of the Council on Foreign and
Community Relations (COFCOR). I am pleased to be in
Grenada. I wish to thank Minister Elvin Nimrod and
the Government of Grenada for the excellent
hospitality and arrangements which they have put in
place for me and my delegation. I want to also
congratulate the Government and people of Grenada
for the remarkable recovery which they have made
after the two devastating hurricanes hit this
country over the past two years ago. The signs of
progress and recovery and enterprise are everywhere,
and I will take this welcome news back to my country
that Grenada is back.
The Bahamas assumed the Chair of COFCOR on 1 June
2005, just days before the Thirty-fifth meeting of
the General Assembly of the Organisation of American
States held last June in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. It
was our country’s honour to host that meeting in
Freeport, our second city that itself was just
recovering from a hurricane. It has been an eventful
year.
Some Ministers might recall that when the came to
The Bahamas last year, they landed right in the
middle of a bruising domestic public debate about
The Bahamas and its relationship with CARICOM and
whether we ought to become part of the Single Market
and Economy. The issue has now been decided with the
Agreement that The Bahamas signed in February at the
Inter Sessional Meeting of Heads of Government which
allowed the provisions of the revised Treaty of
Chaguaramas to enter into force, but with The
Bahamas continuing only in the political and
specialised Organs of the Community and not the
Single Market and Economy arrangements. Please
accept our thanks to all member Governments for
their understanding on this issue as it relates to
The Bahamas. Please also know that The Bahamas
remains committed to regional cooperation.
Congratulations are in order all around for the
remarkable accomplishment of the launching of the
Single Market on 1st January of this year.
As we look back over the year, we can all be
proud of the accomplishments of this body for, and
on behalf of our respective peoples. Our role as the
principal advisors to our Heads of Government has
helped to chart our nations through some difficult
times. The sign of our success is that there is
peace and stability in all of our societies. There
has also been economic progress despite the setbacks
brought on by natural disasters. We all remain at
peace with our neighbours, and where the national
borders of our members were threatened by
anachronistic and contrived claims, we have stood up
for our members, and reaffirmed their right to
existing borders. We must not remain complacent.
The recent assassination of the Minister of
Agriculture of Guyana shows how watchful we must be
to guard against the forces of darkness that also
threaten to disrupt the public order and the rule of
law. Our collective sympathies and those of the
Government and people of The Bahamas go out to the
Government and people of Guyana and especially to
our colleague Minister Rudy Insanally.
Haiti is about to take its seat once more in the
Councils of CARICOM. This is a pleasing development,
following the difficulties that ensued following the
departure of the then President of Haiti, Jean
Bertrand Aristide in February 2004. As the Chair of
COFCOR, I led a delegation along with the
representatives of the CARICOM Secretariat to the
United Nations in March where we met with
President-elect Rene Preval.
During the next year, one our greatest challenges
will be ensuring that all is done to reincorporate
Haiti properly within our Councils. My own feeling
is that an early mission by Foreign Ministers to
Haiti should be sought and that we ought to seek the
sanction of Heads to do so with dispatch.
It was also my honour to have assisted in
maintaining and enhancing of the quality of the
continuing conversation with so many of our friends
and allies. Our relationship with the United States,
the closest developed neighbour to the region
improved over the past year. There were three
meetings with the U.S. Secretary of State, most
recently a dedicated meeting in Nassau in March.
Trade Ministers have now met the Trade
Representative of the United States. It is left now
to follow up on those meetings.
One of the meetings that I believe should be held
is a meeting of National Security Ministers with the
Homeland Security Chief of the United States. My own
view is these contacts with the U.S. Government
should be regular, sustained and frequent so that
the quality and nature of the conversations become
easier. The optics of this for many our peoples are
important.
We should not however neglect our other friends
whether they are in North America, Latin America,
Europe, and Asia and most importantly in Africa. In
fact, my view is that as Minister Nimrod plots our
course over the next year, I have no doubt that
there will be a continued deepening of the
relationships with all of our friends.
Of special importance is the proposed Conference
on the Future of the Caribbean to be held in
Washington in June 2007. The Conference on the
Future of the Caribbean would provide Caribbean
stakeholders with an opportunity to project a vision
of what they would like the Caribbean to be like at
mid-Twenty First Century, and the type of strategic
thinking and planning that is necessary for the
Caribbean to attain its objectives. This will be an
opportunity to review with the U.S. Government, our
own Governments, civil society from the U.S. and the
Region, the academics and the Diaspora where our
Region is headed as we look toward 2020. It is a
discussion that has already begun with Europe. It is
a discussion that should help us define first and
foremost for ourselves who we are and where we are
going.
It is a momentous and defining time for the
Region. I have no doubt that if we use the
intellectual capital of all our peoples that not
only will we survive in this new order, but that we
will prosper in it.
I wish to add words of welcome to our newest
colleague but some one who we know well Tony Hylton,
the Minster of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade of
Jamaica. We said our farewells in Nassau to our
friend and colleague K. D. Knight. I wish also to
express my personal thanks and that of the
Government of The Bahamas to the Most Honourable P.J.
Patterson who demitted office last month as the
Prime Minister of Jamaica and to say congratulations
to the new Prime Minister of Jamaica, the Most
Honourable Portia Simpson Miller.
We as a Region have accomplished much in the past
year. We cannot however live in the glories of the
past but must now forge ahead with commitment and
dynamism to face head on, the challenges which beset
us as a Region.
I wish to congratulate our In-Coming Chairman and
pledge my unswerving support to him as he undertakes
the daunting task of guiding this Council forward in
affairs of international import. As Billie Miller
said to me last year, “Fred, it’s over to you.”
Elvin, it’s over to you! I wish to say to Grenadians
that this Chairmanship is a great honour and a sure
sign that you are back and on the way. I also thank
the Secretary-General and the staff at the CARICOM
Secretariat for their tireless effort and guidance.
I thank you.