| I
welcome you on this 30th day of the year of our Lord
2006, not to Jamaica; I leave that to others more
qualified so to do. I welcome you to the historically
unprecedented higher level of regional integration
- that is, the CARICOM Single Market - to which the
people of the Caribbean Community have now arrived.
Almost
17 years ago, one of my illustrious predecessors as
Secretary-General, the Hon. Roderick Rainford, pointed
out at the seminal Tenth Meeting of the Conference
of Heads of Government at Grand Anse, Grenada that
(and I quote) “experience has taught us by now
that the quest for integration is something in the
nature of an epic struggle, a struggle for congruence
between what we proclaim and what we are able to do,
a struggle to negotiate, design and erect structures
of co-operation and integration where national interest
and regional purpose are brought into harmony.”
The
purpose for which we are gathered here today is to
render formal acknowledgement of the success of one
such struggle. This ceremony to mark the launch of
the CARICOM Single Market, which came into effect
on 1st January 2006, gives us an opportunity to celebrate
a landmark in the progress of that process which was
initiated at that Grand Anse Meeting in 1989.
It
is truly a new dawn, long hoped for, but well worth
the waiting. A journey that began over a generation
ago by the Founding Fathers of CARIFTA and guided
from those earliest times by such intrepid visionary
regionalists as William Demas, Alister McIntyre and
Shridath Ramphal.
The
arrival of the Single Market has generated a great
torrent of expectation across the Region. It is an
achievement, the great significance of which cannot
be overstated. Its substance involves the very essence
of Community – the co-mingling of its peoples
– its greatest assets.
For,
important as the regime for the production of, and
trade in goods has been in the integration process,
and indeed, will continue to be, the Single Market
brings most centrally into the integration process
– people - particularly by providing for the
free movement of skilled CARICOM nationals, of providers
of services, of the self-employed and of those establishing
businesses. The Single Market regime is, therefore,
as we commonly say, “a horse of a different
colour.”
Ladies
and Gentlemen, at the conclusion of that historic
1989 Grand Anse Meeting, at which it was agreed to
“let all ideas contend” as then Prime
Minister A.N.R Robinson of Trinidad and Tobago maintained,
the Heads of Government declared that they were “moved
by the need to work expeditiously together to deepen
the integration process and strengthen the Caribbean
Community in all of its dimensions to respond to the
challenges and opportunities presented by the changes
in the global economy.” That is what the Single
Market and the Single Economy to come, are intended
to do. That imperative, so clearly foreseen by them
then, remains no less urgent in today’s world,
one which presents us as small developing countries
with the stark choice - integrate or perish.
This
bold and visionary step into a deeper integration
process, one which so far only the European Union
has trodden, has certainly fired the imagination and
raised the expectations of the people of our Community.
Since the coming into being of the Single Market on
1st January, people from numerous walks of life have
been seeking information about how they can take advantage
of the process. By the middle of last week, for example,
according to a report from one Member State, more
than 2,000 applications had been received for the
Caribbean Skills Certificate - an important instrument
for the process of the free movement of skilled workers.
And the Single Market is only 30 days old!
In
this situation, the onus is on our political, business
and administrative leadership to ensure that the great
expectations unleashed are met. This is nowhere more
evident than among our young citizens mainly for whom
and through whom this venture must be successfully
realised. We all need to be critically aware of what
the late Michael Manley called “the nature of
the historic locomotive that rushes upon us.”
We must be fully prepared for it.
Ladies
and Gentlemen, in closing, it is fitting that this
ceremony today, welcoming this new stage of Caribbean
regionalism, is being staged at one of the flagship
institutions of Caribbean regional integration –
the University of the West Indies - and in the country
that gave fresh impetus to the integration movement
some 59 years ago at Montego Bay in 1947.
Also,
it is a fitting tribute to our host Prime Minister
who, though he would obviously not have been at Montego
Bay, has been, since his entry onto the regional political
stage in 1972, central to every major effort at regionalism.
Few such would have been as successful without the
benefit and direct involvement of this Caribbean Titan.
His guidance and wise counsel have been, without doubt,
of inestimable value to the development of the Region
- and indeed, to the very occasion we celebrate today.
And please allow me to add, this guidance and counsel
have also benefited me personally, in whichever capacity
I was fortunate enough to be of service to the Region.
Thank
you for it all, Most Honourable Prime Minister Patterson!
And
now I look forward to your address to this ceremony
marking the historic coming into being of the CARICOM
Single Market.
Your
Excellencies, Honourable Heads of Government, distinguished
guests, ladies and gentlemen, citizens of our Caribbean
Community, I thank you.
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