Your Excellency Fraser William Wheeler and Mrs. Wheeler
Members of Staff of the Secretariat and of the
British High Commission
Representatives of the Media
Good day and warm welcome to you all!
Today, we have the good fortune to witness the
accreditation of the first Plenipotentiary
Representative of the United Kingdom to the
Caribbean Community. It is truly an historic
occasion. By this accreditation, we will be
establishing a new threshold in the enduring and
historical diplomatic relations between the
Caribbean Community and the United Kingdom.
Excellency, with the exception of two of our
sister states of Haiti and Suriname, the history of
each Member State and Associate Member of the
Caribbean Community is inextricably intertwined with
that of the United Kingdom. From language to
socio-political systems, to our abiding affinity to
cricket, the fabric of these societies has been
rooted in and influenced by a common colonial
history involving your country from which there has
been significant mutual benefit.
But today, even as we acknowledge history, we
must focus on and analyse the present, to forge and
consolidate a brighter future. We renew and recast
our old relationship to make way for an ever more
efficient and meaningful future partnership.
Excellency, the frameworks in which the United
Kingdom and CARICOM now dialogue and co-operate are
many and varied. Some are serving us well, others
need to be strengthened and yet others need to be
established in order to ensure that the strong bond
between the United Kingdom and the Caribbean is not
weakened in any way. I speak for example, of the UK
Caribbean Forum - the first meeting of which was
held way back in 1998 and the Sixth and most recent
of which was successfully held just last year in
London; of the Commonwealth whose Heads of
Government are due to meet in Port of Spain,
Trinidad and Tobago in November of this year; of the
ever evolving EU-ACP and EU-CARIFORUM relationships
and of course; of the many strong bilateral
relations.
Concretely, the Caribbean has over the years been
the recipient of significant development support
from the United Kingdom in the form of financial and
technical assistance - specifically but not only in
the priority areas of education and Security. The
UK’s Department for International Development (DFID)
is a longstanding Regional development partner. I
understand that it is in the process of finalising a
new regional strategy for the Caribbean. We look
forward to a relevant and substantial programme of
cooperation.
In that spirit, it would be remiss of me not to
acknowledge the announcement made by the UK delegate
at the signing ceremony of the European Union-CARIFORUM
Economic Partnership Agreement held in Barbados on
15 October 2008, of the United Kingdom’s pledge of
10 million pounds towards the CARICOM Development
Fund (CDF), a critical development mechanism of the
Regional Integration Movement, which is designed to
support disadvantaged countries, regions and sectors
within the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).
This offer was further complemented by a mirror
offer of another 10 million pounds to create a
Challenge Fund in support of Caribbean
entrepreneurship and innovation. High Commissioner,
the Region is deeply appreciative to the United
Kingdom for these contributions.
Notwithstanding the above however, and in a world
confronted by increasingly varied and intense
challenges, the CARICOM-UK partnership is now called
upon to be even more dynamic than it was in the
past. The arguments for more and deeper dialogue and
co-operation between CARICOM and the United Kingdom,
rest as much on continued positive commonalities as
on mutual exposure to common threats. They
underscore the need for enhanced relations.
Positive commonalities apart and there are many,
the threats too are serious - poverty; widening
economic gaps within and between developing and
developed countries; climate change and attendant
negative phenomena - all of this underscored by a
global economic and financial crisis which
exacerbates the aforementioned challenges.
It is noteworthy, High Commissioner that your
Prime Minister and Government, are championing two
challenges of particular importance to this Region.
These are climate change and reform of the
international financial institutions. Both matters
were discussed at length during the Sixth
UK-Caribbean Forum in July last year.
Excellency, if the findings of the Stern Report
on the economic impact of climate change have raised
concerns in the United Kingdom, you can appreciate
the extent to which living with the realities
reflected in that Report, has alarmed the small
island and low lying coastal countries of CARICOM.
Climate Change for us, is not a future fear, but
a current yearly incremental crisis – an attack on
our development – a real security threat. It is a
threat, not of the Region’s making but certainly one
for which the Region is surely paying. Also, it is
one we cannot adequately confront alone.
There is also the fact Excellency, that there are
various linkages between climate change and
Caribbean development. For example, there is a
direct link between the decisions of nations like
the UK in regard to this phenomenon and the Region’s
mainstay industry, tourism. The decision of Nations
like the UK, to impose incremental taxes on airline
tickets for long haul destinations, including to the
Caribbean, to offset the costs of adapting to
climate change caused in significant degree by
carbon emissions by those countries, means that
countries like those in the Caribbean, like Peter,
are paying not just for Paul but for all!
Excellency, you will no doubt appreciate our
Community’s genuine concern over the implications of
such charges for our tourism and ultimately for our
employment and development.
That having been said, the Community fully
recognises and appreciates the leadership role being
played by Prime Minister Gordon Brown in the wake of
the current global crisis and echoes his call for
the reform of the International Financial
Institutions or IFIs. In that regard we would urge
that the needs of the most vulnerable of their
clientele - the small, vulnerable, and highly
indebted economies of the Caribbean be addressed.
Among these are several CARICOM Member States which
have been graduated thereby deemed ineligible for
concessionary financing to support their development
needs. We expect our oldest friends like the United
Kingdom - to support us in all relevant fora as we
strive to bring home to the international community
the injustice inherent in such policies.
In the area of security, CARICOM-UK co-operation
has been strong and for this, I wish on behalf of
the Community to thank the United Kingdom for its
support. That co-operation has already yielded
significant results, most memorably in relation to
the arrangements for the successful 2007 Cricket
World Cup (CWC) which the Caribbean was proud to
host. Within the context of a new Community security
governance architecture, which reinforces the
decision to make Security the new fourth pillar of
integration, we are building upon the successes of
the CWC and are hopeful that discussions on future
cooperation on security between CARICOM and the
United Kingdom will yield positive results.
Excellency our partnership has been truly mutual.
Not only have we received many benefits from our
relationship with the United Kingdom but the
partnership seen a not insignificant part of the
human resources of our Region being expended to the
benefit of the United Kingdom. Caribbean trained
nurses, teachers and other professionals are
contributing in no small measure to the United
Kingdom’s society as people of Caribbean origin
serve and contribute meaningfully to the political,
economic and commercial life of your country.
As regard Your Excellency, your distinguished
diplomatic career has afforded you a wide and global
perspective of international affairs and your
experience in the Region and interaction with us to
date, as the High Commissioner of the United Kingdom
to Guyana, has reassured us of your commitment to
and genuine interest in our Region. You know us and
we know you, and that is part of the essence of the
friendships between people and nations. We are
secure in the knowledge that the CARICOM-UK
partnership has been entrusted to most able hands.
Before I close, Excellency, allow me on behalf of
the Community to congratulate the Government of the
United Kingdom on its successful bid to host the
2012 Olympics in London. We wish you every success
for its smooth unfolding even as of course we look
forward to our Caribbean athletes impressing all and
inspiring us once more with their triumphs!
Unfortunately Excellency, we are not able to express
similar sentiments in relation to your team of
cricketers which arrived on our shores on Wednesday.
We do hope however, that they enjoy their stay,
whatever the results of the encounters.
Excellency, whatever the results, we look forward
to building upon our already positive relationship
with you and through you with the United Kingdom.
THANK YOU!
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org