As we welcome the New Year, 2007, as Secretary-General,
I am confident that the Caribbean Community has
erected a solid foundation towards achieving its
goals.
2006 was a year of undoubted progress with
far-reaching implications for Caribbean integration.
It began on an historic note with the coming into
being of the CARICOM Single Market on 1 January,
with the entry into force of the Revised Treaty of
Chaguaramas. This was a very significant milestone
in the journey on which the Founding Fathers of
CARIFTA embarked over a generation ago.
This year, 2007, holds great promise but requires
even deeper commitment from all of us. Having as a
people taken that giant step to forge a Single
Market and Economy, unprecedented among developing
countries, it is incumbent on us to discharge our
responsibilities with diligence, urgency and
sensitivity, to ensure effective implementation. In
that regard, the time must surely have come for a
definitive decision to be taken on the long,
outstanding issue of enhanced governance of the
Community.
Therefore, apart from consolidating the fledgling
Single Market, this year we are determined to press
on and complete the framework for the Single Economy
by 2008. To achieve this however, a lot of dedicated
work and intense collaboration among the
institutions of the Community and involving all
sectors of the society – government, private sector,
labour and civil society - lie ahead of us. Let us
therefore, hold fast, be resolute and keep the focus
as we build a competitive single economy.
That Single Economy will include among other
things, closer monetary and financial co-operation,
integration of our capital markets, common fiscal
and investment policies, changes in our corporate
structures, harmonised taxation structures as well
as exchange and interest rate policies – all
resulting in higher levels of income and more jobs.
A critical element of this process is a properly
planned and effectively implemented outreach
programme. This has already begun with Belize and
will continue throughout the New Year to all Member
States. For indeed the success of the integration
movement will be measured by the extent to which the
citizens can genuinely refer to it as our Caribbean
Community.
In July 2006, following democratic elections,
Haiti was welcomed back into the Councils of the
Community. Since then we have been working
assiduously, together with the Haitians, to fully
re-integrate that country into the Community. To
that end, we will soon be re-opening the CARICOM
Representational Office in Port-au-Prince, as well
as celebrating with the Haitian people, the 200th
Anniversary of their Parliament. This coincides with
the observance of the 200th Anniversary of the
Abolition of one of the most degrading episodes in
human history, the Atlantic Slave Trade. The
Community will also participate in these
observances.
The instability swirling around the global
environment should drive us as a people to redouble
our efforts to build for ourselves and our children
a stronger Caribbean Community. For it is only as
such a unit that we can brave those winds, a
realisation that has informed our approach to our
external economic and trade negotiations, especially
that for a beneficial Economic Partnership Agreement
with the European Union.
2007 will see an unprecedented regional
initiative with the proposed CARICOM/United States
Conference on the Caribbean in Washington D.C. This
promises to herald an exciting reaffirmation of our
relationship with one of the Community’s most
important traditional partners, the United States of
America.
It is also within such a united framework that we
are facing up to the challenge posed to our people
by the HIV/AIDS virus. We have been joined in this
struggle by the wider Caribbean but despite the
continuing success of this Pan Caribbean Partnership
Against HIV/AIDS (PANCAP), the situation is such
that there is no basis for complacency. Nor is there
any, with regard to that other pervasive Community
social ill – crime. Both require the strongest and
most sustained, concerted counter measures for their
eradication.
A unique reward emanating from our common
approach is the opportunity to stage the Cricket
World Cup in our Region in 2007. By mid-February,
functioning as a single domestic space, we would be
welcoming the world to our shores as we host,
compete - and hopefully – win, the Cricket World Cup
2007. This is most fitting as cricket is our oldest
and certainly one of our most successful symbols of
regional integration, along with the University of
the West Indies. These are symbols of unity we must
treasure.
We must also grasp this opportunity to ensure
that this World Cup, the first to be held in such a
large number of different venues – nine - is truly
the best ever. We must also take advantage of the
beneficial legacy which it bequeaths. Likewise, we
must use the opportunity to show the world that the
Caribbean, quite apart from being a unique and
desirable tourist destination, has people with the
organisational skill to successfully stage a
world-class event.
All of this would no doubt provide a boost to the
Community in its efforts at moving the integration
arrangements forward. This would be just reward for
the strenuous efforts of our leaders and their
officials. In that regard, our Heads of Government,
under the leadership of the two Chairmen of the past
year - the Honourable Dr. Denzil Douglas, Prime
Minister of St Kitts and Nevis and the Honourable
Patrick Manning, Prime Minister of Trinidad and
Tobago, played critical roles in ensuring the
deepening of the integration process in 2006.
To Dr. the Honourable Ralph Gonsalves, Prime
Minister of St Vincent and the Grenadines, our
Chairman from January to June 2007, and the Rt
Honourable Owen Arthur, Prime Minister of Barbados,
Chairman from July to December 2007, we extend our
best wishes and fullest support as you assume the
mantle of leadership of the Community.
To you, the people of the Caribbean Community, in
CARICOM you have built over the past 34 years the
longest existing and one of the most successful
integration movements among developing nations -
despite its continuing shortcomings. It is an
achievement of which we can all be justly proud. In
many ways however, the journey has just begun. And
it is a journey that, to be worthwhile, must lead us
to a viable and prosperous Caribbean Community, one
worthy of the highest aspirations of all its people,
particularly the youth. And that is indeed our aim.
Finally as we leave 2006 and enter 2007, we must
pay tribute to three significant contributors who
departed the scene in the past year, having made
sterling contributions to the Caribbean and to the
world in general. I refer to the former United
Nations Secretary General His Excellency Kofi Annan,
the former Prime Minister of Jamaica, the Most
Honourable P.J.Patterson and the former “regional
airline” BeeWee!
It is with these thoughts and commitment that on
behalf of the Caribbean Community, as its
Secretary-General, I welcome the New Year and wish
the entire Community A VERY PRODUCTIVE AND
PROSPEROUS 2007!