Good
Evening. Few of you will know the tremendous relief
this function provides for me and the entire staff
of the CARICOM Secretariat: Relief that we have come
this far at last in a project that has consumed much
of our time and energies over the past few years.
In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if at the end of
this function, we should hear the collective sigh
of relief emanating from Georgetown, Guyana right
across the hallowed plains of Mona.
But, I am happy to be in Jamaica for this launch;
and I must say I got here just in time and despite
the vagaries of intra-regional air transport services
that provided me with some anxious moments of the
past few days, and indeed, the entire week, as I fulfilled
Community engagements in Guyana, St. Kitts and Saint
Lucia.
It is significant in more than the symbolic, that
this launch is taking place at Mona, the cradle of
Caribbean intellectual thought and a well-spring of
human resource development in our Caribbean Community.
I want to thank you all for being here this evening
and especially the Most Honourable Prime Minister
P.J. Patterson for doing us the additional honour
of officially launching this publication. This is
no accident however, for as you go through the book,
you will see many photos of Prime Minister Patterson
capturing over three decades of dedicated service
to CARICOM. What you may not as readily appreciate,
is the profound influence he has had on the development
and achievements of CARICOM. For this, I take this
opportunity to publicly express our thanks to him.
Without his contribution - and the only thing that
is negative about it - we would have had a much smaller
book.
While we had also hoped to have had the current Chairman
of CARICOM, Prime Minister Mitchell of Grenada, with
us this evening, unfortunately, hurricane Ivan and
even more recently the crisis in that other important
pillar of Caribbean integration - cricket - have conspired
to prevent him from being with us. I think he is in
Barbados seeking to broker an agreement between the
players and the Board.
Similarly, one of the more recent entrants to the
sometimes hazardous field of political leadership,
rime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit of Dominica, should
also have been with us this evening. Unfortunately,
an earthquake, which rocked Dominica on Sunday morning,
and which unequivocally reminds us of the vulnerability
of our Region, has kept him at home.
Ladies and Gentlemen, there is no shortage of literature
on Caribbean regional integration and on CARICOM as
an integration movement. What may be scarce, however,
is literature that captures the historical, socio-economic
and political context and explores the mechanics of
regional integration, from the perspectives
of those actively involved on a day-to-day basis.
At the same time, many of the very valuable books
written about CARICOM are usually tailored to fill
the academic needs of tertiary level education and
intellectual discourse carried on at the level of
postgraduates and technocrats: And many among you
have written and worked in this way.
Indeed, it is in this context that CARICOM Heads of
Government have reaffirmed the need to establish arrangements
to "promote a Caribbean ethos and give a sense
of common purpose" in light of the wide gap that
has been found to exist between official and popular
knowledge of CARICOM. As a result, it was widely agreed
that more varied CARICOM produced and disseminated
educational, cultural and general community information
programmes, were urgently needed. This, as a means
of increasing public knowledge and appreciation of
CARICOM among a more generalised readership that involves
the average Caribbean citizen and most importantly,
our young people.
The Book, CARICOM: Our Caribbean Community
- a Introduction, is therefore, a timely
initiative providing greater and more widespread knowledge
of the history, present and future prospects of the
Community, thereby, we hope, promoting wider participation
in the process of community building and integration.
The book sketches our history as a people, outlines
the process of modern Caribbean integration, explains
in detail the structure and functioning of the Community,
and provides us with some perspectives as we face
the future, all in language that we hope, is easily
understood. Always brought to the front, in the material
(at least so we sought to achieve) is the impact -
experienced and potential - which the many issues
addressed will have on people of the Community. Equally
important, has been the efforts to locate CARICOM
and the Caribbean within the context of the overarching
economic and geo-political architecture of the hemisphere
and the global community.
In doing so, the Book draws heavily on illustrations
- maps, charts, graphs and tables; and the use of
colour to highlight the many issues and initiatives
which have occupied the attention of the regional
integration movement.
It also captures the mood, thoughts and actions of
the Community and its leaders. This is nowhere more
evident than towards the end of the decade of the
1980s - a critical turning point in our evolution
and development. This was the point at which bold
responses were fashioned as the gathering storm of
globalization threatened us with marginalization and
even annihilation.
Along with the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME)
and the launching of the important process to revise
the Treaty Establishing the Community, that period
was also important for a concerted move to democratise
the regional integration process. The Community, as
you will recall, then resorted to the establishment
of the West Indian Commission. The important results
coming from the Commission led to the development
of a Charter of Civil Society as well as the creation
of a deliberative body - the Assembly of Caribbean
Community Parliamentarians.
Apart from discussing the challenges and presenting
the successes and failures of the Community, the book
ventures to provide pointers and suggestions on the
possible way forward in a range of areas that are
all vital to our continued survival and success so
as to fulfill the legitimate expectations of our people
for greater security and prosperity.
In this regard, it recognises the significant value
of the volumes of Hall and Benn on the future development
of the Caribbean Community.
Although "Our Caribbean Community"
targets persons in the 14-24 age group, we
believe that its clear style of presentation will
be attractive and useful to a wide cross section of
readers.
One subject covered in the book that is of particular
importance and topical relevance, is the creation
of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy including
the Caribbean Court of Justice. These will have profound
implications for everyday life in the Community: All
the more reason that CARICOM citizens, from the youth
to the elderly, must be kept informed.
We at the CARICOM Secretariat are therefore proud
to present this 'reader' - CARICOM: Our Caribbean
Community - A Introduction - not as a bible, but as
a useful guide as we advance the process of regional
integration. It represents a labour of love and commitment
to the Region and to its people and we hope it will
be accepted as such.
Ladies and Gentlemen, I am pleased not only to participate
in this historic book launch, but also to have been
afforded the opportunity to do so on my own campus
and alma mater.
Tonight in this process, we bring together representatives
of the Region's:
• political directorate;
• technocratic arm;
• academia; and
• wider civil society, including the media.
It is my hope that with the help of this publication
we will succeed in building a sturdy Caribbean Community
- one, in the words of the Prime Minister of Barbados
"that is a lived experience", worthy of
the highest aspiration of all our people.
For
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