Jamaica Gleaner

Outgoing EU ambassador finding it difficult to celebrate peace amid world crises

- Ainsworth Morris/Staff Reporter ainsworth.morris@gleanerjm.com

WHEN HUNDREDS gathered to celebrate Europe Day 2024 last Thursday evening, Marianne Van Steen, European Union (EU) ambassador to Jamaica, declared there was not much happiness to cheer about.

Van Steen, i n giving her last welcome and remarks as ambassador during the gettogethe­r for Europe Day, said war, hate speech, xenophobia, cyber insecurity and lack of respect for territoria­l integrity and increasing disregard for internatio­nal law have taken over.

“I’m very sorry, but even if it’s Europe Day today, it’s very difficult to celebrate peace under these circumstan­ces. In Europe, we are in between two wars. One of which I do not need to mention. Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine. Two years ongoing and counting. Another war in south in the Middle East that is even more divisive, and a third war that we should not forget, global warming, and we all know we can only win that war if mankind unite, and I think we’re very far away from that, so yes, we are very worried,” said Van Steen, who arrived in the island almost four years ago.

“We are still inspired by the Schuman Declaratio­n – the running pride that gave birth to the European Union and that remains as relevant today as it was 74 years ago – but if all of that sounds very dark and obscure and it’s not exactly what we want to hear... , there are still countries in the world with people and with leaders who share a commitment to the values that we hold dear [such as] human dignity, freedom, democracy, the rule of law and human rights and Jamaica, the country I have had the honour to serve as an ambassador for almost four years now, is one of those,” she said.

Europe Day is usually the day when the EU celebrates peace with its origins the desire for peace and democracy for the people of Europe and the world. It also honours the legacy of former French foreign minister Robert Schuman, and it is for this reason some persons acknowledg­e the annual celebratio­n as Schuman Day.

On May 9, 74 years ago, Schuman made a proposal for the cooperatio­n between the European nations after the two world wars, and trying to make the nations live together and making war between them unthinkabl­e.

The annual celebrator­y event took place at the Delegation of the European Union to Jamaica at Fairway Avenue in Jamaica’s capital.

WORRIED ABOUT EXTREMISM

There, Van Steen also said extremism is on the rise and there will soon be elections in Europe at the beginning of June. She noted that she and other Europeans are worried to see an extremist vote arising in that union.

“I’m afraid that this Europe Day, today, May 9, 2024, is not really a day that we can celebrate peace. Our world today i s markedly different from the world we aspired to 74 years ago,” Van Steen said.

“Extremism is not only arising in Europe. It’s arising in far too many countries in the world. There are bombs and missiles killing innocent people. There are young people who are protesting, because they see a world in which they see an increase in absence of justice. There are young people protesting, because they are inheriting a world where climate has become a fret for them, for their children [and] for their grandchild­ren,” she said.

Van Steen noted that she is lucky to find Jamaica a strong, reliable partner, and a nation with which the EU has built a solid relationsh­ip for almost 50 years.

For her part, Kamina Johnson Smith, minister of foreign affairs and foreign trade, also touched on the significan­t impact war has on the EU and other states.

“We reflect on the reality that, despite Europe’s vast socioecono­mic progress, the spectre of war has not been escaped. The cooperatio­n envisioned by the Schuman Declaratio­n was intended as a vehicle to achieve peace and unity. It is indeed the sad reality that the Russian war against Ukraine continues to destroy lives on both sides and threatens the stability which Europe worked hard to achieve,” Johnson Smith said.

“As wars and conflicts rage across the globe, in the Middle East and Africa, the internatio­nal community continues to count on the EU and its core belief in peace, to assist in returning the world to a place in which peaceful settlement of disputes and reliance on a rulesbased multilater­al system, guide us all. Jamaica shares in these valued principles and is committed to doing our part,” she said.

Johnson Smith also emphasised that a celebratio­n of Europe Day would not be complete without due recognitio­n of the EU’s extensive internatio­nal developmen­t cooperatio­n programmes. For many decades, these programmes have provided tremendous support to developing countries, like Jamaica.

Since the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties between Jamaica and the EU 49 years ago, the EU has supported Jamaica’s economic growth and developmen­t, in critical areas including agricultur­e, the cultural and creative industries, environmen­t and climate change, citizen security and justice and, most recently, digital transforma­tion.

“In line with Jamaica’s Vision 2030, the EU’s developmen­t support continues, but now under the Samoa Partnershi­p Agreement and its NDICI programmin­g, which in turn supports the government’s efforts to improve the quality of life for all Jamaicans,” she said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ANTOINE LODGE/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? From left: Delroy Chuck, minister of justice; Dr Nigel Clarke, minister of finance and the public service; Marianne Van Steen, ambassador, European Union to Jamaica; Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Senator Kamina Johnson Smith; Dana Morris Dixon, minister with responsibi­lity for digital & skills transforma­tion; State Minister in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Alando Terrelonge; Ellen De Geest, Belgium ambassador to Jamaica; Diego Bermejo Romero de Terreros, Spanish ambassador to Jamaica; and Deputy Ambassador of Germany to Jamaica Kristina Nigbur-Sammy, during the Europe Day Celebratio­n last Thursday on the lawns of the European Union Delegation to Jamaica in Kingston.
PHOTOS BY ANTOINE LODGE/PHOTOGRAPH­ER From left: Delroy Chuck, minister of justice; Dr Nigel Clarke, minister of finance and the public service; Marianne Van Steen, ambassador, European Union to Jamaica; Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Senator Kamina Johnson Smith; Dana Morris Dixon, minister with responsibi­lity for digital & skills transforma­tion; State Minister in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Alando Terrelonge; Ellen De Geest, Belgium ambassador to Jamaica; Diego Bermejo Romero de Terreros, Spanish ambassador to Jamaica; and Deputy Ambassador of Germany to Jamaica Kristina Nigbur-Sammy, during the Europe Day Celebratio­n last Thursday on the lawns of the European Union Delegation to Jamaica in Kingston.
 ?? ?? Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Senator Kamina Johnson Smith (left) and Marianne Van Steen, ambassador, European Union to Jamaica toast the relationsh­ip between Europe and Jamaica during last Thursday’s Europe Day Celebratio­n on the lawns of the European Union Delegation to Jamaica in Kingston.
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Senator Kamina Johnson Smith (left) and Marianne Van Steen, ambassador, European Union to Jamaica toast the relationsh­ip between Europe and Jamaica during last Thursday’s Europe Day Celebratio­n on the lawns of the European Union Delegation to Jamaica in Kingston.
 ?? ?? Paula Llewellyn embraces Marianne Van Steen, ambassador, European Union to Jamaica.
Paula Llewellyn embraces Marianne Van Steen, ambassador, European Union to Jamaica.

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