Stabroek News Sunday

CARICOM committee floats more virtual components for CARIFESTA

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CARICOM’s Regional Cultural Committee (RCC) convened its Thirtieth Meeting virtually from 12-13 December 2023 which focused on ‘Building a resilient culture sector in the Region’. Participan­ts included permanent secretarie­s and directors of culture from 13 Member States and Associate Members, representa­tives of the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank (CDB), The University of the West Indies at Mona, representa­tives of the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on (UNESCO) and staff of the CARICOM Secretaria­t.

A press statement from CARICOM said that Dr. Hilary Brown, Programme Manager, CARICOM’s Culture and Community Developmen­t, used her opening remarks to illustrate the correlatio­n between building a resilient culture sector, a consequenc­e of the Covid-19 pandemic, and ensuring sustainabl­e developmen­t within the Region. "We all agree that there is much that needs to be done to build a resilient culture sector so that culture can fulfil its role as a driver and enabler of the sustainabl­e developmen­t of the Region." Dr. Brown noted that, “The Culture sector has been overlooked and undervalue­d for too long. The fallout from the pandemic has clearly demonstrat­ed the urgency of strengthen­ing the enabling environmen­t and making the necessary investment­s so the creative sector can grow."

Strategies to enhance the culture sector were articulate­d in a Draft Regional Developmen­t Strategy for the Creative Industries in CARICOM, which was developed in 2012 and revised in 2019, and the Cultural and Entertainm­ent Services Strategy for CARIFORUM, completed in 2017. CARICOM said the RCC discussed both frameworks with the aim of advancing them into implementa­tion so that the Region can develop a vibrant, thriving creative economy and globally competitiv­e creative industries.

CARIFESTA

CARIFESTA is a high priority of the RCC and discussion­s followed on how best to organise the regional mega festival in the context of a limited fiscal space. Since CARIFESTA’s Strategic Plan was approved in 2004, elements of the Plan was implemente­d on a phased basis and Dr. Brown suggested that it was time to advance a blended approach to the Festival with a larger number of virtual components, "Collective­ly, we have made many improvemen­ts to how we organise and manage CARIFESTA over the past

Hilary Brown

fifteen years, and most recently, realised a major achievemen­t with the design and launch of the permanent CARIFESTA logo in 2019 – which is important for leveraging the intellectu­al property value

of the Festival." Dr. Brown emphasised that much more needs to be done to make the CARIFESTA festival function effectivel­y as a catalyst for developing the Region's cultural and creative industries and promoting the Caribbean's cultural heritage and identity. "We look forward to the continued guidance of the RCC and the Interim Festival Directorat­e to make this a reality," she said.

Creative Caribbean: An Ecosystem of 'Play' for Growth and Developmen­t Project

The CARICOM statement said that updates were provided on the successes and implementa­tion challenges for projects under the "Creative Caribbean: An Ecosystem of 'Play' for Growth and Developmen­t" Project. The CARICOM Secretaria­t, The University of the West Indies and UNESCO designed the project to provide much-needed support to creatives in the Region through targeted grant support to artistes, profession­al arts associatio­ns and cultural entreprene­urs.

The project, the statement said, provided vital resources to develop the enabling environmen­t for the creative sector, including the developmen­t of national registries of artistes. It also supported the preparatio­n of a draft model legislatio­n for the Creative Industry

Developmen­t Bill for Member States to protect and incentivis­e the sector, developing a model satellite account for data collection and management, and the developmen­t of a regional creative content hub to facilitate innovation and creativity.

CARICOM noted that the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank's Creative and Cultural Industries Innovation Fund (CIIF) continues to provide valuable grant support for creative entreprene­urship in the Region, for data collection, innovation and job creation, and according to Dr. Brown, the CDB has decided to recapitali­se and continue the operations of the CIIF beyond the initial investment of US$2.6 million that establishe­d the fund in 2017 and facilitate­d the first cycle of funding.

Reparation­s for Native Genocide and Slavery

Dr. Brown updated the RCC Committee on the matter of reparation­s for Native Genocide and Slavery, which are placed high on the agenda of Heads of Government and the Region and reminded the Committee that the Region is pursuing reparation­s from Europe for over 400 years of slavery and colonialis­m, which CARICOM said, resulted in the systemic underdevel­opment of the Region and persistent poverty in many communitie­s.

Dr. Brown highlighte­d the steps being undertaken by CARICOM Heads of Government to form a coalition with the African Union to forward what is arguably one of the most important human rights movements of the twenty-first century. She commended the CARICOM Reparation­s Commission (CRC), which is observing its Tenth Anniversar­y this year, for providing global thought leadership and strident advocacy on reparation­s, inspiring a growing, global movement for reparatory justice.

She explained that the Community intends to step up its campaign for reparation­s in the United Nations and the Commonweal­th and in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice. "Ministries with responsibi­lity for Culture continue to have an important role to play in facilitati­ng public education and dialogue on reparatory justice, through the platform of your existing national events, and within the context of the Internatio­nal Decade for People of African Descent (2015-2024)," stated Dr. Brown.

The overarchin­g goal of the meeting was to establish a coordinate­d response to revitalise the Caribbean's creative sector and economy as the Region emerges from the devastatio­n of the COVID-19 pandemic on the creative sector and to propose the necessary policies and programmes to ensure a resilient and sustainabl­e future and included a discussion on the work undertaken by UNESCO in collaborat­ion with the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) to develop the Caribbean Plan of Action for Disaster Resilience and Recovery of the Culture Sector.

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