So, who/what is this “Caricom” about which
everybody seems to know so much nowadays?
The Caribbean Community (Caricom) was
inaugurated on July 4, 1973, at a signing ceremony in Chaguaramas, T&T. The
Treaty of Chaguaramas (as revised in 2001) is a legally binding international
agreement.
There are 15 full member states and 6
associate members. In 1973 there were just four members – Barbados, Guyana,
Jamaica, and T&T. The effort to establish Caricom is widely credited to the
convening of several meetings of Caribbean leaders in 1963 and initiated by
late T&T PM, Dr Eric Williams.
This was only one year following the
dissolution of the West Indies Federation that was launched in 1958 and
included Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Montserrat,
St Kitts-Nevis-Anguilla, Saint Lucia, St Vincent, and T&T.
On December 15, 1965, the Caribbean Free
Trade Association (CARIFTA) was launched in Antigua and Barbuda as largely a
free trade grouping, but including issues associated with industrialisation and
agricultural production.
CARIFTA eventually morphed into Caricom
with a much wider scope of objectives and engagement and often overlapping
agendas. The four main pillars of this new mandate include economic
integration, foreign policy coordination, human and social development, and
security cooperation.
Over the years, each pillar has confronted
its fair share of difficulties – foreign policy coordination being among the
more prominent, but not sole area of concern and occasional conflict.
For these and other purposes, the principal
organs of the Community pay close attention to the setting of policy – which is
the role of the Conference of Heads of Government – and include the important
and second highest body, the Community Council of Ministers, followed by the
Councils for Finance and Planning (COFAP), Foreign and Community Relations
(COFCOR), Human and Social Development (COHSOD), Trade and Economic Development
(COTED), the National Security and Law Enforcement (CONSLE).
For satisfaction of its extensive and
diverse mandates, the Community also relies on close to 30 specialised and
complementary autonomous and semi-autonomous institutions.
These include the Caribbean Court of
Justice (CCJ) headquartered in Port of Spain for the resolution of disputes
related to the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas, but which currently serves as the
court of final appeal for five member states.
The Court, in its Original Jurisdiction
(resolution of Treaty disputes) has responsibility for all 12 participants in
the Caricom Single Market and Economy (CSME), including T&T, and has ruled
in several such matters. So, yes, T&T is “in the CCJ.”
There is also the Caribbean Public Health
Agency (CARPHA) which played a leading role in the COVID-19 pandemic, the
Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) which is currently quite
active in Jamaica and works closely with our Office of Disaster Preparedness
and Management (ODPM), the Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC), and the
Caribbean Agricultural Research and Development Institute (CARDI) located in
T&T.
There are others that play leading roles in
important areas such as climate change, telecommunications, renewable energy,
regional standards and quality setting, tourism, meteorology, and regional
security.
On issues of regional security there is the
Caricom Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS) which was
established in 2006 and is headquartered in T&T. It is responsible for
convening regional meetings through standing committees of police
commissioners, military heads, immigration chiefs, customs heads and officials
of intelligence and financial investigative agencies and units.
Recent promotion of the upcoming (finally)
of a T&T online E/D travel card, for example, involves employment of a
platform that has long been in use in several Caricom countries and is hosted
by IMPACS.
T&T meanwhile has Caricom “portfolio
responsibility” for regional security and energy.
![]() |
| My "CSME Certificate" issued in 2006 |
I am the holder of “Certificate of
Recognition of Caribbean Community Skills Qualification” No. 783 granted on
February 23, 2006, which I have used for work permit-free employment in the
region. My old friend, now Minister of Planning, Kennedy Swaratsingh, most
likely received his Caricom skilled nationals certificate for work in Barbados
long after I did.
There is much more to this basic
introduction to Caricom, but I do not have a full newspaper to continue the
story. At some point we will also need to explore the Caricom Secretariat.

.jpg)