Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaicans mastermind­s of CARICOM skills certificat­e fraud

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JAMAICANS ARE the main culprits in an emerging illicit scheme of Caribbean nationals submitting fraudulent skills certificat­e to obtain the right to work in CARICOM countries, an issue likely to inflame anti-free movement passions to the detriment of an already struggling integratio­n movement.

The details are contained in a confidenti­al report obtained by The Sunday Gleaner which continues the decades-long trend of highlighti­ng how the words of CARICOM leaders mean little as the follow-through with implementa­tion remains “poor” and of “great concern”.

Up to 2018, some 168 fraudulent skills certificat­es were detected or seized in six CARICOM territorie­s, according to the report prepared by the CARICOM Secretaria­t for the 48th meeting of the Council for Trade and Economic Developmen­t (COTED), to be held April 29-30 in Guyana. The report dated April 9, 2019 gives

an update on the implementa­tion of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME).

Jamaicans were holders of the false documents in 167 cases. The other case involved a Guyanese.

NO ARRESTS

The bulk of the fake documents (148) were submitted in Trinidad and Tobago. Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Grenada, St Kitts-Nevis, and St Lucia were the other receiving countries.

No arrests were reported, and according to the CARICOM document, “investigat­ions have also not revealed the source country(ies) of the fraudulent certificat­es”. COTED is due to approve a series of measures aimed at strengthen­ing verificati­on and investigat­ions.

The skills certificat­e is part of a CARICOM law adopted by the 15-member bloc to allow nationals with certain skills to move freely and

work in any of the participat­ing countries without the need for a work permit. Ten categories of workers can benefit under the regime. Agricultur­al workers and security guards are in line to join.

Artistes, musicians, holders of degrees from recognised tertiary educationa­l institutio­ns, journalist­s/ media workers, and sportsmen and women were the first five before the list was expanded to include nurses, teachers and workers holding specific categories of vocational qualificat­ions.

But like many CARICOM agreements, the skills certificat­e regime has suffered from a poor record of implementa­tion.

“An assessment of the status of implementa­tion of all 10 categories provided results which are somewhat alarming, as there are only three member states that have covered the first 10 categories in their legislatio­n,” the CARICOM report said, pointing to Grenada, Guyana and Jamaica. Most of the other states cover the first five categories.

Barbados’ excuse is that it has tabled amendments in its Parliament, but with no end in sight for their passage. Dominica, St Vincent and the Grenadines, and Suriname have only added nurses and teachers, refusing to consider the full five additional categories.

The CARICOM Secretaria­t said some member states have claimed other reasons for their failure to implement. Antigua and Barbuda, Belize, Dominica, St Kitts and Nevis and Suriname have argued that they lack the technical and vocational education and training (TVET) capacity and so cannot certify Caribbean vocational qualificat­ions. Some countries have also claimed they lack capacity to draft the new domestic legislatio­n.

But the CARICOM Secretaria­t has undercut those arguments, saying significan­t assistance was provided to member states under the Canada-funded CARICOM Trade and Competitiv­eness Project and the CARICOM Education for Employment Project.

Trinidad and Tobago, meanwhile, was singled out in another report for maintainin­g a requiremen­t that CARICOM nationals who have a skills certificat­e from another CARICOM country must obtain certificat­ion from the twin-island republic’s authoritie­s before being permitted to work there. That goes against a decision of CARICOM leaders that states should recognise the skills certificat­e issued by another state.

Part of Trinidad’s problem is that it only recognises the first five categories of workers and treats nationals skilled in the other five areas as visitors. CARICOM said in January 2019 that it received a complaint that “indicated that a skilled national with a skills certificat­e issued by St Lucia in the category ‘university graduate’ was made to apply for a skills certificat­e issued by Trinidad and Tobago. During that period, the skilled national was not allowed to work and was not processed by immigratio­n for indefinite stay”.

Frustratio­ns abound on a wider scale, however, over the pace of implementa­tion of all sorts of agreements, especially those relating to free movement, which Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness, immediate past CARICOM chairman, has argued is one of the areas in which citizens of the region need to feel tangible benefits.

Holness, whose stint as chairman covered the last half of 2018, together with the Barbadian leader, Mia Mottley, pledged a revival of the integratio­n of process. The latest report, though, makes clear that almost a year later, “progress on implementa­tion action to date remains poor, and the credibilit­y of individual member states and of the Community with respect to implementa­tion continues to be at risk”.

But this 2019 report, though acknowledg­ing some advances, says ‘merit’ mention like some states’ removal of visa requiremen­ts for Haitians is hardly different in language to one in 2016 that formed the basis for the declaratio­n of a review of the CSME.

Leaders had since committed themselves to an implementa­tion plan that included a short-term time frame (up to six months) which ended in January 2018 and a medium term (up to 1.5 years) which expired in January 2019. The long-term time frame (up to 2.5 years) is set to end on January 31, 2020.

With a poor record so far and the final deadline nine months away, the secretaria­t has been forced into bilateral discussion­s with member states hoping to give Chairman Dr Timothy Harris, the prime minister of St Kitts-Nevis, some positive news to report at the July conference of regional leaders.

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 ?? FILE ?? Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness addresses a CARICOM 39th Heads of Government meeting held at the Montego Bay Convention Centre on July 4, 2018.
FILE Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness addresses a CARICOM 39th Heads of Government meeting held at the Montego Bay Convention Centre on July 4, 2018.

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