It has become absurdly fashionable in some
circles to dismiss Caricom as a wasteful, irrelevant enterprise worthy of
dissolution and relegation to the garbage bin of history.
Over the years, I have realised that even
greater than the malice generated by false notions of socio-cultural,
geographic and other forms of inherent individual strength and weakness is the
pervasive ignorance surrounding the nature of the institution our community of
nations has built, and the misplaced expectations that accompany it.
The process of “leaving” Caricom is more
than getting up in disgust in the middle of an unsatisfactory stage
performance. For, while doing so, attachments to various appurtenances of the
theatre, including the main stage and other pieces of infrastructure, including
the ceiling, do not remain undisturbed.
Over the past 53 years of Caricom, its
mandates and institutional responses have grown to extensive and diverse
degrees. There are now, for instance, almost 30 specialised and complementary
autonomous and semi-autonomous institutions that serve as key pillars of the
integration process.
I have offered the reminder numerous times
that, among these institutions, is the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ),
headquartered in Port of Spain.
It serves as the legal forum through which
12 member states, including T&T, may resolve disputes arising from the
Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas. This is the mechanism now being invoked at
T&T’s insistence in relation to the appointment of the Caricom
Secretary-General.
Attorney General John Jeremie is familiar
with CCJ processes, having appeared as attorney for Trinidad Cement Ltd in the
2022 case against the government of T&T. He also appeared, together with
Keith Scotland and others, as counsel in a matter - [2022] CCJ 15 (AJ) GY -
involving the appellate jurisdiction of the court at the height of the 2020
post-election debacle in Guyana.
Though the court currently serves as the
court of final appeal for five member states: Barbados, Belize, Dominica,
Guyana, and Saint Lucia, our country has, in this regard, been very much “in
the CCJ”, albeit through other means.
There are professionals far more qualified
than I to challenge the nonsense surrounding T&T's alleged non-engagement
with the court – “we not in the CCJ” - and I remain surprised that the Law
Association has never undertaken a rigorous public awareness campaign to
address this endemic ignorance, even at senior levels.
Among things to also be considered in the
“get up and leave” sentiment is the fact that Caricom “entanglements” include
intimate involvement in major institutions including the Caribbean Public
Health Agency (CARPHA) - which played a leading role in the COVID-19 pandemic -
and the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA), to name just
two.
Also consider the roles of the Caricom
Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS), the Caribbean
Examinations Council (CXC), and the Caribbean Agricultural Research and
Development Institute (CARDI).
There are others that play leading roles in
important areas such as climate change, telecommunications, renewable energy,
regional standards and quality setting, tourism, fisheries, and meteorology.
Now, if you find the time ahead of the
World Cup Final, have a look at the communiqué emerging from the 51st Caricom
Heads meeting in Saint Lucia last week.
There, you will find joint reflections on
some of the more urgent matters of today, not the least being Caribbean's
vulnerabilities and hazards that are transnational in nature. Consider the
impact on our southern coastline from the earthquakes in Venezuela.
Hurricanes also do not respect maritime
boundaries. Criminal networks move across jurisdictions. Climate finance
negotiations are conducted in global fora where numbers matter. Digital
transformation cannot be addressed through fragmented national policies. Food
insecurity is shaped by conflicts occurring thousands of miles away.
Implicit in these observations alone, you
find that the argument for integration has become stronger, not weaker.
Importantly, and as I pointed out last week
right here, the politics of integration do not match the energy and aspirations
of young people and ordinary citizens.
The Caricom project also includes a considerable workload of unfinished business – most of which is specifically relevant to our ability to engage current and emerging challenges. We are horsing around with this at our peril, T&T!


No comments:
Post a Comment