| Members
of the public are being invited to attend a free public
session on the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME)
on Wednesday, January 25 beginning at 7:00 p.m. at
the Fellowship Tabernacle Auditorium, 58 Half-Way-Tree
Road.
At the event the Jamaican public will be sensitised
to the actualisation of the CARICOM Single Market
(CSM), which came into effect on January 1, 2006.
Participants will also be given a regional overview
of the state of compliance of participating CARICOM
Member States.
Main speakers for the evening, who will also answer
questions posed by the public, will be from the regional
CSME Unit in Barbados.
The team will include: Ivor Corry, Economist, who
has over 20 years experience with regional integration
in CARICOM and who heads that Unit; Leela Narinesingh,
Specialist, Private Sector Facilitations, CSME Unit,
Barbados; Salas Hamilton, Specialist in Communications
at the Unit and a legal specialist.
“People want to know about what’s happening
in Guyana, in the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean
States (OECS), in Haiti, Montserrat and the Bahamas,
for example,” Robert Miller, Head of the CSME
Unit at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign
Trade in Jamaica, told JIS News.
Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Jamaica,
St. Lucia, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago are already
part of the CSM, while Grenada, St. Vincent and the
Grenadines and St. Kitts and Nevis will be CSM-ready
by the end of the quarter.
Of
a 15-member organisation, this however leaves three
members – Haiti, the Bahamas and Montserrat
-still on the periphery.
As a British colony, Montserrat is in the legal process
of entrustment from the United Kingdom (UK). Following
entrustment, Montserrat will no longer be a UK colony.
“The process is taking a little longer than
they had foreseen,” explained Mr. Miller.
The reason for the Bahamas opting out of the CSME
so far has been the free movement of labour section
of the Free Movement Clause of the Treaty of Chaguaramas.
Currently, five categories of wage earners can move
freely within the CSM without work permits, which
have been replaced by the simpler Certificate of Recognition
of CARICOM Skills Qualification, loosely referred
to as the skills certificate. They are: university
graduates, artistes, musicians, sportspersons and
media workers.
In addition, managers, technical and supervisory staff
attached to a company and the self employed who may
not be strictly defined as wage earners complete the
list of those eligible for free movement.
In the case of Haiti, the CARICOM Secretariat expects
that following that country’s proposed elections
this quarter, Haiti will be an active participant
in the CSME.
It is proposed that Jamaica, through the Electoral
Office of Jamaica (EOJ), will assist in the Haitian
elections.
Of note will be the issue to be discussed by Ms. Narinesingh.
She will focus on the proposed operationalisation
of a regional stock exchange and the necessary adjustment
that will be required of the OECS.
Earlier
that day, the media will also be given further insight
to the integration process currently underway, at
a press briefing to be hosted by the regional CSME
Unit at the Jamaica Information Service (JIS) conference
room.
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