WHO WILL STAND UP FOR CARICOM?
Greater Georgetown, July 3, 2009 -- Former Prime Minister of Jamaica, the Most Honourable Percival James Patterson, on Thursday, charged Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) to stand up and be counted for the Community.
In accepting CARICOM’s s highest honour - the Order of the Caribbean
–Community (OCC) - the Mr Patterson told Heads of Government at the
Opening Ceremony of their 30th Meeting in Georgetown, Guyana, that
CARICOM was like “a growing plant which must be nurtured…Unless we tend
to the tree, it will wither…”
Describing himself as an incurable and “unrepentant regionalist,” Mr
Patterson called for unity among the Heads encouraging them to learn to
“sing from the same hymn sheet,” since “there’s simply no other way
out especially in these times…”
The rest of the Region, he said, was waiting with bated breath to hear
whether their leaders intended to keep the CARICOM boat afloat and if
so, how they intended to do so.
The OCC Awardee noted that the challenges now being faced by the
Community were different and far more daunting than those of 20 years
ago, but he was convinced that the Community had enjoyed several
successes in the areas of Functional Cooperation, the dismantling of
trade barriers, entrepreneurialship, agriculture, ICT, Education,
culture and sport development … and that It still had the resilience
to look beyond the global crises and harness the positives for the
greater good of Caribbean peoples.
Notwithstanding the successes, Mr Patterson said, the continuity of the
Community was neither automatic nor guaranteed. However, the former
Jamaica Prime Minister told his former colleagues that the Community’s
collapse was not an acceptable option because Caribbean peoples were
depending on them to use regional integration as a vehicle to improve
their lives.
What was needed, he said, was a resolve to act: “The litmus test is not
in the meeting but in the actions which follow.” The Community’s
greatest failure, according to Mr Patterson, lay in its inability to
follow-up decisions and to act.
“Who will stand up for CARICOM?” he asked.
In addition, he underscored the need to exploit new and dynamic
relations with countries such as Brazil and Australia, without
disturbing the relations with traditional trading partners.
Charging them to make the Single Economy a reality, Mr Patterson
cautioned against giving rights and access to external groupings while
struggling with the issue of contingent rights for its own people.
He expressed further, his hope that he would see the day when the
Caribbean make full use of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) as the
court of final jurisdiction.
In the citation read by Guyana’s Communication and Public Education
Specialist Dr. Rovin Deodat, the Most Hon. P J Patterson was cited as
the quintessential Caribbean man who was instrumental in building an
integrated Caribbean from CARIFTA to CARICOM.
He was also lauded for his “priceless legacy of wisdom,” and acclaimed
a champion of the development agenda and a doyen of regional
development and cooperation who was instrumental in the completion of
the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas that formed the basis of the
development of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy.
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