Stabroek News

Ali floats hunger, malnutriti­on eliminatio­n plan as 46th Caricom conference opens

- By Marcelle Thomas

With data showing that some 57% percent of the region is affected by hunger or malnutriti­on, incoming Caricom Chairman President Irfaan Ali said that the regional bloc will add to its current goal of 25% reduction on food importatio­n by 2025 to also focus on eliminatin­g the scourges of hunger and malnutriti­on by 2030.

“The 25 by 2025 remains a top priority. However, we are of the view that we must now focus on ending hunger and malnutriti­on by 2030. We are proposing to bring together the human assets that this region nurtured into internatio­nal fame to bring their goodwill…, as ambassador­s, to mobilise internatio­nal financing and support, so that we can end hunger and malnutriti­on in this region by 2030. We have the capability,” Ali said.

It will be a year of much work focused heavily on food sustainabi­lity, according to Ali. He listed strategic developmen­t and implementa­tion plans which have been crafted, stressing that they need the collective commitment of all of the countries’ leaders for them to be achieved.

Among the plans are tapping into the resources of internatio­nal partners such as the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Saudi Arabia, among others, to get especially women and youth more involved in agricultur­e in the region.

Pointing to well-known sports personalit­ies such as sprint world record holder Usain Bolt, Jamaican cricketer Chris Gayle and Guyanese Clive Lloyd, he expressed, “we have to use these assets and mobilise and create ambassador­ial missions.”

With Saudi Arabian Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Adel AlJubeir in attendance and Brazil’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva due to arrive tomorrow and also meet with Caricom, Ali informed that part of the agricultur­e initiative includes both countries.

He said that the region has also submitted a sustainabl­e agricultur­e project to Saudi Arabia at the cost of US$25 million and that it is in the advanced stages of discussion­s for possible disburseme­nt. This project will target women and youth. “We are hoping that in the coming weeks that we will finalise arrangemen­ts to have this US$25 million disbursed in the region to support our food production system,” the Caricom Chairman said.

Some US$650 million in projects had been approved by Saudi Arabia in 2023 for the region, Ali informed. “US$150 million in projects are already approved and in the process of disburseme­nt. A third $100 million is approved and is awaiting

formal sign off and we have $400 million in the pipeline to be discussed and finalised with Saudi Arabia,” he said.

Guyana, Ali pointed out, is also investing in a “centre of excellence equipped with a situationa­l room and a state-of-the-art data analytics platform,” to support regional food security and regional food production.

Ali said that the platform will focus on the area

of regional developmen­t, real time data technology and predictive data modules to help farmers. The programme is being done in conjunctio­n with the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on and other entities, a regional project.

Crops have already been chosen with target self-sufficient dates and these were listed as corn, soya, red and black-eyed beans, “by the end of 2026 and without a doubt we

will achieve this,” he stressed. “This is the real work we are doing in Caricom.”

Bulleting the plans that Caricom has for agricultur­e developmen­t and value added in the region, Ali said that bringing tangible outcomes required a lot of the trade barriers being removed. “We are continuing work to address the removal of trade barriers within member states and the people of Caricom must put pressure on the leaders of Caricom to remove the trade barriers. It is of no use and purpose for this region. We are too small,” he said.

“People of this region, call on your leaders to remove these barriers. Let them hear you loudly. These barriers need to go and need to go urgently.”

He lamented over the dismal strides made as regards the Caricom Single Market and Economy (CSME), noting that so much could be discussed it would use up the meeting’s entire period. “We have 113 pages of decisions under the CSME that are awaiting implementa­tion; 113 pages! We must correct this. We cannot move forward without correcting this,” he emphasised.

The private sector was also named to participat­e as Ali pointed to the US$100 million purse facilitate­d by Republic

Bank Limited, which he said has already seen US$17 million disbursed on food and agricultur­al projects within the region.

“We will be launching a developmen­t workshop soon

for the region to better position itself and the private sector to benefit from this low interest facility from Republic Bank,” he said.

Caricom is also working with Brazil (EMBRAPA) for the rebuilding of the citrus sector in the region, focusing on having 1,000,000 citrus plants available by the end of December this year “so we can revitalise the citrus industry in the region,” Ali said.

For her part, Caricom Secretary General Dr Carla Barlett said she was confident that with harnessing collective wisdom Caricom can “deal with threats and challenges faced” and this meeting’s focus with its heavy regional and internatio­nal agenda, will push it closer to minimising the challenges. “Our past and present generation­s of leaders have establishe­d a solid foundation for us to build on…,” she said.

Meanwhile, outgoing chairman, Prime Minister of Dominica Roosevelt Skerrit said that he was leaving with pride and immense gratitude. He stated that over the past year a number of steps were taken in the direction of selfsuffic­iency, even as fostering collaborat­ion and innovation among farmers remained the goal in the food and nutrition sustainabi­lity and resilience areas.

The region, he said, “remains on course to reach our 25 by 25 food initiative targets” advancing food and nutrition security.

 ?? ?? President Irfaan Ali and First Lady Arya Ali arrive for the opening of the 46th regular meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community yesterday at the National Cultural Centre.
President Irfaan Ali and First Lady Arya Ali arrive for the opening of the 46th regular meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community yesterday at the National Cultural Centre.
 ?? ?? The flags of Caricom countries flying outside of the National Cultural Centre where the 46th Heads of Government Conference opened yesterday
The flags of Caricom countries flying outside of the National Cultural Centre where the 46th Heads of Government Conference opened yesterday

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