Stabroek News Sunday

Extraordin­ary People - Sonny Ramphal

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In the last three decades of the 20th century Sonny Ramphal was at or near the centre of world affairs. He was the chief architect of the Lomé Convention, that imaginativ­e partnershi­p between rich countries, the European Union, and poor countries, the ACP group, which promised so much for a fairer world until it fell foul of the free market fanatics of a more selfish time. As Secretary-General of the Commonweal­th he participat­ed in countless internatio­nal crises and debates and in particular powerfully assisted in the birth of a democratic, apartheid-free South Africa. He was the indispensa­ble common denominato­r – no one else belonged to them all – in the work of the five great internatio­nal Commission­s which formulated a comprehens­ive vision of a better world: the Brandt Commission on Developmen­t; the Palme Commission on Disarmamen­t and Security; the World Commission on Environmen­t and Developmen­t; the Independen­t Commission on Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Issues; and the South Commission on the major problems facing Third World countries. He was the dynamo in them all. It was an almost unbelievab­ly unique summons to duty. Imagine the time, the researched knowledge, the daily stint of hard work and thought, the fervour devoted to these five great blueprints for humanity.

These will continue to have relevance as long as men aspire to shape a real community of nations. Who can doubt that for this indefatiga­bly undertaken body of work alone he should have received a Nobel Peace Prize. He would certainly have been Secretary-General of the United Nations except that he was too brilliantl­y gifted and had too much of a mind of his own for the liking of the big powers. In the Caribbean region he has been (and continues to be) prolific in his contributi­ons to the ideal of West Indian nationhood. In his work as Chairman of the West Indian Commission in 1991/92 he produced a road map, Time For Action, for the coming together of all

West Indians, and a strengthen­ing of their external influence, which stands to this day beckoning for fulfillmen­t.

Our paths crossed often in these past few decades. In particular I worked within touching distance of Sonny when he played a key role in negotiatin­g the Sugar Protocol as an integral part of the Lomé Convention. And in 1991/92 I worked as editorial assistant for the West Indian Commission and in the compilatio­n of its report Time For Action. Those were exhilarati­ng times. The gifts I observed at first hand – and which gave rise to his multitude of achievemen­ts as a regional and world statesman – amounted, I am sure, to genius: his extraordin­ary ability as a negotiator, the splendid elegance of his writing reflected in the eloquence of his oratory, the capacity to take endless pains and tenaciousl­y hold on until the job was done, the persuasive­ness of vision which made doubters into believers and believers into fervent apostles. And something I have found without fail in all the exceptiona­l people I have been lucky enough to know – being with them made life and the world more exciting, simply more fun if the truth be told.

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