Stabroek News

CARICOM summit produced no meaningful results

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Dear Editor, At the opening ceremony of the 28th Inter-Sessional Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of CARICOM which was held in Guyana on February 16-17, Ambassador Irwin LaRocque, CARICOM Secretary-General and Chairman, David Granger failed once again to present meaningful and concrete policies and programmes for implementa­tion for the social and economic growth and developmen­t of Community Members to enable them to service their heavy debts and provide employment opportunit­ies for their people.

Ambassador LaRocque reported that considerab­le progress was made towards these objectives through execution of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME) Agreement which allows for the free movement of skills (people), goods, services and the establishm­ent of businesses within the Community. Since approval of this Agreement, however, the facts suggest otherwise as there has been little compliance with its intent particular­ly regarding the free movement of people among states and money transfers from one territory to the other without restrictio­ns as Trinidadia­ns recently found. Further, there has been no pooling of resources to tackle the common problems member states share.

Over the years there has been little economic developmen­t while production has been declining in various member states. Trinidad’s economy, the Region’s largest has been declining due to low oil and gas prices and diminishin­g production while in Guyana its sugar industry, the country’s largest employer is heavily indebted and with continual operating losses. It could go under anytime with devastatin­g impact on its workers. The APNU+AFC Government is clueless as to what should be done as it struggles to find meaningful solutions for the welfare of its displaced sugar workers. The global/Caribbean Hotel Industry (Tourism Sector) is saturated after a 20-year building boom and therefore it cannot be a primary driver for economic growth and to attract significan­t investment to create jobs as Ambassador LaRocque depicted.

Ambassador LaRocque continues to be a dreamer. He postulated at the meeting that Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technology (ICT), “is critical to the developmen­t and advancemen­t of the Region”. This may well be so but he failed to state that the region does not have the infrastruc­ture nor a pool of trained workers to support such a sector which will take years to develop. Guyana has no training programme for its best and brightest willing to pursue a career in ICT but as Chairman Granger could have attested, his APNU+AFC Government has been lending support for the training of lawyers hopefully to boost Guyana’s economy.

Crime and security are indeed critical to the developmen­t and advancemen­t of the region, particular­ly for tourism areas. Many Caribbean-born criminals living in the USA will soon be returning to the region in droves as President Trump’s ICE Team rounds them up for deportatio­n to their respective countries. CARICOM members have no plan to integrate these people back into society so they could become useful and productive citizens. Could the Secretaria­t offer its members guidance to deal with the impending problems the criminals are likely to pose on return to their countries or will it be satisfied to just identify them and leave it at that?

Guyanese should be wary of and concerned about their continued membership of CARICOM, an organisati­on which has become costly to operate and maintain, while its bureaucrat­s lack the expertise to advise members to solve their political, social and economic problems in meaningful ways. Yours faithfully, Charles Sohan

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