2018 a year of rebuilding and growth – Caricom SG

CARICOM Secretary-General Ambassador Irwin LaRocque (center) with new Barbados Ambassador to CARICOM Ms. Veronica Griffith and St Vincent and the Grenadines Ambassador to CARICOM Mr Allan Alexander

Developing the world’s first climate resilient countries is a key focus for the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) for 2018 which promises to be a year of “rebuilding and growth,” CARICOM Secretary-General, Ambassador Irwin LaRocque said Friday 12 January.

He was at the time accrediting new ambassadors of Barbados and St. Vincent and the Grenadines to CARICOM at the Headquarters of the CARICOM Secretariat in Georgetown, Guyana.

Her Excellency Veronica Griffith, Plenipotentiary Representative of Barbados to CARICOM; and His Excellency Allan Alexander, Plenipotentiary Representative of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines to CARICOM were accredited in a short ceremony which preceded the 6th Meeting of the CARICOM Committee of Ambassadors. The Ambassadors are in conference Friday ahead of a Meeting of the Community Council of Ministers on Monday 15 January.

Secretary-General LaRocque told the newly accredited ambassadors that as Members of the Committee, they can support the future direction of integration, and play a significant role as the Community advances its climate resilience agenda.

He added that members of the Committee have a central role in providing the necessary link between the regional and the national agendas, and to engage and interact with the citizens of their countries to highlight and promote the objectives, work and benefits of the Community.

“This is an essential contribution to strengthening the CARICOM Identity and Spirit of Community,” he told the newly accredited Ambassadors.

Within the framework of the CARICOM Strategic Plan, he noted their role in ensuring that the regional integration movement “has a greater impact on the lives of our people.”

The Secretary-General lauded the significant role Barbados continues to play in the Community with its Prime Minister having responsibility for the regional flagship initiative, the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).

Barbados also holds the Chair of the CARICOM Commission on the Economy, actively considering the matter of economic growth of the Region, as well as the chair of the Prime Ministerial Sub-Committee on Reparations. The latter, the Secretary-General noted, assumed even greater importance “when one recognises that Haiti is the only country which has had to pay reparations.”

He told Ambassador Alexander that St Vincent and the Grenadines has been a strong and dedicated advocate of integration at all levels, noting that Prime Minister Dr the Honourable Ralph Gonsalves has been a leading advocate for recognition of a distinct Caribbean Civilisation.

“CARICOM has benefitted significantly from St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ contribution. Your country’s persistence in seeking to improve air and maritime transportation in the Community demonstrates the commitment of Prime Minister Gonsalves as the Lead Head of Government with responsibility for Transport in the Quasi-Cabinet. That area is a critical element in the Community’s pursuit of regional integration,” Secretary-General LaRocque said.

He also noted Prime Minister Gonsalves’ leadership of the Prime Ministerial Sub-Committee on Cricket, ‘another important rallying point for our unity’.

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5 Comments

  1. UKDominican
    January 15, 2018

    Irwin, if I hear climate-resilient one more time, I will puke. We have all sorts of committees and subcommittees. We even have a Caricom cricket committee no less. but all this is just a Punch and Judy show if we cannot even get the basics right. We can not get ripe fig in Dominica but when I try to bring some with me from our Caricom & OECS sister island St. Lucia they get confiscated by customs in Dominica. Why? Doesn’t that island export those same bananas to England, is their black sikatoka worse than ours? What about that supposedly free trade between us? Keep on meeting Irwin and spend the money but we appear to be getting nowhere fast.
    PS. And don’t tell me the customs don’t eat these bananas themselves after they have confiscated them.

    • Iloveda
      January 15, 2018

      You will puke if you hear climate resilient some more time? Have you been in a shell? Don’t you know what Dominica and other Caribbean islands went through just a few months ago? And regarding you trying to travel with your little fig, you think in e.u countries you can just travel like that with fruits in your suitcase? The same applies for NAFTA, you can’t just bring fruits from Mexico or Canada into America, there is a process with traveling with produce. How some people are so uneducated like that Nah and quick to comment on things like that.

      • An
        January 15, 2018

        I can cross from Germany into Frane, Belgium, Holland, just to mention a few, with any produce without hindrance. The EU really woks. Caricom and OECS are just talk shops.

      • Mother
        January 16, 2018

        But every day supermarkets in Dominica selling foodstuffs from America, including meat and vegetables. So that is ok then even if the USA is not a Caricom member?

    • vrai den
      January 15, 2018

      Climate resilient? We cannot start to fix the roads so people can safely transport their building materials to repair their homes after Hurricane Maria? Every road is full of potholes, and certain roads are so bad, people with trucks, even if they need the jobs, are refusing to attempt to try to deliver materials to certain areas, eg. Castle Comfort, Beau Bois, Giraudel, the road is so bad. Until there is a disaster, we will continue like that?

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