Stabroek News

President pushes for closer integratio­n with St Lucia

-in address to island’s Parliament

-

Pushing for closer integratio­n with Castries, President Irfaan Ali said yesterday that during the last 10 years, Guyana exported US$71 million in commoditie­s to St Lucia, while the Caribbean island exported US$79 million in supplies to the “Land of Many Waters”.

The President made this disclosure while addressing St Lucia’s parliament in commemorat­ion of the country’s 45th Independen­ce Anniversar­y.

While calling for “systemic integratio­n”, between the two countries to advance healthcare, education, technology and housing developmen­t, Ali is adamant that Guyana can assist the “Helen of the West Indies”, to advance in its housing sector.

He remarked “Systemic integratio­n requires our education and healthcare systems and technologi­cal platform to be integrated”.

“Connectivi­ty is not just the movement of people, goods, and services. Connectivi­ty is about the movement of ideas, policies, and the integratio­n of systems. Connectivi­ty must be able to address all of this if we are to build a seamless system,”

President Ali said that his government has made major strides in improving the housing sector for the three years it has been in office.

“If you look at your existing housing market and let us say, conservati­vely you have a deficit in the housing market of 2,500 homes in the next three to five years, that is the immediate term, the medium-term need and you use the conservati­ve figure of US$30,000 for a lowincome home; that is why we are building prefabrica­ted homes in Guyana.

“You’re looking at an export potential of US$75 million in the immediate and medium term from Guyana to St. Lucia”, he said.

“That export potential in this one area alone is more than the combined export in the last 10 years, and these are the opportunit­ies, the real opportunit­ies that exist in expanding the relationsh­ip and expanding the trade between Guyana and St. Lucia”, he added.

The Head of State proposed that adapting these mechanisms will undoubtedl­y generate wealth and aid in the integratio­n of the manufactur­ing industries both in Guyana and St Lucia.

“These are things that I think offer immediate opportunit­y for the private sector and for us, as policymake­rs, to create the enabling environmen­t that would allow this opportunit­y to become a reality”, he put forward to the St. Lucia Parliament.

The President said that the two countries can work together in the area of regional security as it relates to the developmen­t of its physical and human resource capacity in the armed forces.

President Ali also alluded to the trend of a “systemic disparity” in the region which he said also can be tackled by regional integratio­n.

Because St Lucia’s food import bill is approximat­ely 2,345 metric tonnes per annum, the head of state said that the local production systems could be created to eliminate those imports in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) state.

The President also recommende­d that St. Lucia invest in shade houses and

hydroponic­s as this would help the country in reducing its food import bill by almost 70 per cent.

He stated that Guyana has adopted a model by creating innovative agro-business opportunit­ies using technology, research, and the involvemen­t of women and young people.

“What this does is that it allows the rethinking of agricultur­e and the opportunit­ies that exist in agricultur­e. And in allowing this rethinking, you have new capital and technology that come in and a renewed interest. Agricultur­e is part of the food production system which Guyana is pushing because we recognise that we cannot depend on an oil and gas economy, we have to be diverse and think long term”, he asserted.

Ali said that while Guyana and Barbados are currently at the helm of developing a regional food terminal, he

will ensure that the said facility is built in a way which connects St Lucia so that the country can be a part of the regional distributi­on market.

The President pointed out that St Lucia imports close to US$12 million in fish and poultry on an annual basis, and suggested that a consortium be formed between the private sectors of both countries to keep the trade within the CARICOM region.

“This import can occur within the region. This business can be developed in the region. These opportunit­ies can be catalyzed within the region, your work can be created within the region. Both St Lucia and Guyana will benefit, and the region will benefit as a whole”, he contended.

 ?? ?? Former St Lucian Prime Minister Dr Kenny Anthony at the sitting of the St Lucian Parliament yesterday (Office of the President photo)
Former St Lucian Prime Minister Dr Kenny Anthony at the sitting of the St Lucian Parliament yesterday (Office of the President photo)
 ?? ?? President Irfaan Ali addressing the St Lucia Parliament (Office of the President photo)
President Irfaan Ali addressing the St Lucia Parliament (Office of the President photo)

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