I cannot speak for the rest of the Caribbean Community, but I can confidently assert that the people of Barbados – after some 52 years of national Independence – are coming (or have come) to the firm collective realization that their best hope for a secure, prosperous, and opportunity-filled future lies within a successful Caribbean integration Movement rooted in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM).

You see, as the Barbadian people – under new political leadership – buckled down in the year 2018 to the urgent task of rebuilding the country’s economic fortunes, certain  realities became unmistakably clear to those charged with the responsibilities of piloting the ship of state.

I am referring to such realities as the fact that whilst Barbados’ economy, as measured by its annual Gross Domestic Product, is approximately US$4.53 Billion, the combined Gross Domestic Product of the 15 member states of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) is some US$74.8 Billion – 16½ times the size of the Barbados economy.

Similarly, while the land mass of Barbados is 430 square kilometres, the collective land mass of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) is 463,300 square kilometres – some 1,076 times the size of Barbados!  And while the   population (and potential market) of Barbados is 280,000 persons, the combined population (and potential market) of CARICOM is 18,335,544 persons – 64 times the size of Barbados’ population and potential market.

What holds true for Barbados also holds true for every other member nation of CARICOM.  For example, Trinidad & Tobago may boast of the largest economy in the Caribbean Community with a GDP of US$21.89 Billion, but the combined CARICOM economy is still nearly 3½ times the size of Trinidad & Tobago’s.  And while Guyana may boast of the largest land area at a massive 215,000 square kilometres, the territory of the combined Caribbean Community is still well more than twice the size of Guyana!

We therefore cannot help but recognize the tremendous potential opportunities and benefits that are there for all Caribbean people and CARICOM nations to capitalize on – if only we can complete the urgent work of establishing a seamlessly inter-connected “Single Market and Single Economy” in our vast and extensive 463,000 square kilometre Caribbean Community space.

Surely, part of our ambition for ourselves and our children and grandchildren must be to have at our disposal both a physical and an economic space in which we and they can freely roam in search of career and life opportunities.  And in a contemporary world in which powerful nations are either building border walls to keep out people who look like us or are enacting a host of anti-immigrant laws and regulations, we must consider ourselves fortunate to actually have in place a CARICOM Skilled Nationals Programme that permits skilled CARICOM citizens to move freely across our community in search of gainful employment and business opportunities.

More and more – in Barbados – the idea is taking root that we have absolutely nothing to fear from our CARICOM brothers and sisters who are coming to our island nation and bringing valuable skills and entrepreneurial energy with them.  Rather than being a detriment to our nation, these skilled intra-Caribbean migrants actually add value to the society and generate additional economic activity that everyone benefits from.

Similarly with our private sector businesspersons and professionals.  Just imagine how much good will redound to our economies if we are able to put the entire legal and regulatory structure in place to permit business enterprises and capital to move speedily and efficiently across the economic and physical space of our extensive multi-territory Community in search of markets and new arenas in which to build enterprises!

Imagine also the benefits to be derived from a state of affairs in which we are able to permit the many categories of trained and certified Caribbean “professionals” to register in one CARICOM member state and to have that registration automatically accepted in all 15 member states, thereby enabling the “professional” to move freely and effortlessly in the practise of his or her profession!

And surely, it is not beyond us to contemplate a scenario in which CARICOM governments, CARICOM businesses and the Caribbean labour movement combine together to create regional initiatives and structures of production to establish a system of inter-territory sea transportation; a food production programme to tackle our collective US$4 Billion annual food import bill; an import substituting manufacturing programme to tackle our collective annual US$6 Billion trade deficit; an initiative to unlock and deploy the potential investment capital to be found in the US$47 Billion in savings that our Caribbean people have deposited in banks at ridiculously low interest rates; a system for identifying and collating the high level technical and managerial expertise that is to be found in our regional public and private sectors and making it available to CARICOM nations in need of such expertise; and the list of possible projects goes on and on!

It should therefore not be too difficult for us – the people of the Caribbean Community – to visualize a beckoning future that is hopeful, positive, and full of possibilities.

It is against this background that I describe this new year of 2019 as a “Year of Destiny” for our Caribbean Community (CARICOM).  This is the year in which our CARICOM Secretariat, our Heads of Government, and all of the Councils, organs and bodies of CARICOM must take the Caribbean people on an unprecedented inter-active journey to accomplish the several critical projects that have been placed on  CARICOM’s 2019 agenda.

And if my fellow Caribbean citizens are not aware, let me inform them now that these projects include the commencement of initiatives to establish a regional fast ferry maritime transportation system, a Pan-Caribbean news and information network, a joint Public/Private agricultural and food production project, and an innovative economic engineering project to develop new financial instruments which will convert a significant portion of Caribbean bank deposits into investment capital.

They also include the fostering of regional economic growth and development by permitting Caribbean companies to bid for large government contracts right across the community, and the facilitation of an “ease of doing business” regime with the enactment of a regional Investment Policy and Code, a CARICOM Incentives Regime, a regional Financial Services Agreement, a single region-wide mechanism for the registration of companies, and the full implementation of the CARICOM Skilled Nationals Programme.

If, therefore, a year from now – on the 31st December 2019 – we are able to reflect back on this extensive work programme and to utter a collective “mission accomplished” we would have effectively launched our very own Caribbean economic, cultural and political “megaship”, and taken a giant and decisive step forward in securing our future .

170 responses to “From the Office of the Ambassador to Caricom – CARICOM’s “Year of Destiny” has arrived!”


  1. @Hal Austin January 3, 2019 12:09 PM

    @ William,

    I am not objecting o regional unity. I am in favour of a West Indies Federation, which includes all 7000 Caribbean islands. The problem with CARICOM is that it is flawed, badly flawed.

    The foliks who voted for brexit believe the EU is flawed, but you believe they should not have voted to leave. Why is that?


  2. The folks*

  3. William Skinner Avatar

    @ Bajan in NY
    I have never commented on BU about BREXIT.


  4. @ Vincent Codrington,

    Fungee ( Antigua ) is the same as Cou cou ( Barbados )

    For Corn Meal Fungee

    4 cups water
    6 okras, cut into small pieces
    1 tsp salt to taste
    2 cups corn meal


  5. @William Skinner January 3, 2019 8:08 PM

    @ Bajan in NY
    I have never commented on BU about BREXIT.

    My comment is addressed to Comrade Hal not you mate.

  6. Barbados Underground Whistleblower Avatar
    Barbados Underground Whistleblower

    @ De pedantic dribbler

    You may term my reference to this particular blog as being disrespectful when I mentioned Drivel, I make no apologies for my assessment.

    I know David Commissong both personally and professionally and have no beef or issues with him as we ALWAYS have had a good cordial relationship.

    However Mr. Commissong in his new role reminds me of Dennis Kellman when he got a pick in Government, again another individual I know of both professionally and personally.

    However what I read and what I know of Regionally led me to make my Drivel comment.

    Nothing against either individual who I could term as friends or close associates.


  7. @David
    “History has shown that in every situatIon what is required is a little leadership. ”

    therein lies the problem.

    @Donna
    you are absolutely correct. Without common impetus or direct challenge there is neither need nor urgency.

    Just observing

  8. Overseas Observer Avatar
    Overseas Observer

    Stranded Haitians still at Salvation Army hostel

    The stranded Haitian men who were moved to the Salvation Army’s City hostel after they were evicted from the Brittons Hill home they were renting are being allowed to stay there as long as they have legal status to remain in Barbados, and once there is room, Divisional Commander Major Darrell Wilkinson has told Barbados TODAY.

    Nine of the 15 men who were evicted were moved to the hostel last Saturday evening.
    Wilkinson said that while the Salvation Army welcomed the stranded visitors, in keeping with its international mandate to feed and cloth the poor and assist refugees, once the six months’ visitors stay expires, they would not be able to stay at the hostel because they would be considered illegal immigrants.
    Major Wilkinson said: “My captain who is dealing with the matter shared with me that David Comissiong [Ambassador to CARICOM], is trying to get some assistance for these Haitians to get them back to their homeland. As far as I am aware, some want to go back for sure, some want to stay to get work because things are difficult in Haiti, but that is not our portfolio here at the Army. We are just here to give assistance with housing for the time being. I will leave the rest for Mr Comissiong and his team to work on.
    “We will give as much assistance as we can give. But as for how long they are going to be here, I just don’t know. They can only stay as long as the Government gives them permission. Whenever their six months is up then they would have to go back, and some of them have already gotten close, they are just a matter of weeks away from that.

    “But the Salvation Army has opened its doors, which is something we do not only in Barbados, but also around the world. We have quite a few centres around the world for persons who are seeking accommodation, within the rules and laws of the country.”
    The men, who said they came here in search of a better life, reported that they were the victims of a scam where they paid between US$2,500 and US$3,000, to an agency in Haiti, with the assurance they would receive accommodation and jobs when they landed in Barbados.
    But upon arrival, they found no jobs and had to pay for accommodation. They have since exhausted their finances.

    They were evicted from the house at, Brittons Hill, by landlord Anthony Mayers, who told Barbados TODAY that he was fed up with the condition the house was being kept in. The landlord also complained that while he charged the men $1,300 including light and water, within one month, the water bill alone had reached $1,200.
    After they were put out on the streets, the men were rescued by former Government Senator and Chairman of the National Assistance Board, Pastor David Durant, who took them to his Restoration Ministries Church where they were accommodated and fed until they were moved to the hostel.
    Pastor Durant said he visited the men, who are between the ages of 21 and 36, at the hostel yesterday, and three of them informed him that they were willing to go back home, and requested financial assistance to buy return tickets to Port-au-Prince.

    He told Barbados TODAY: “I am working with an agent who is working with Copa Airlines to see how we can get the three of them back to Haiti as soon as possible. Two of them want to leave on Saturday, and the next one is asking to go two weeks later. They said they want to go because they are not finding any jobs here, they have run out of money, and they think it is best to return home where they can try to make things a little easier for themselves.

    “They are very thankful for the help that is being offered by the church. Right now the three of them are here and I am waiting for the agent to call me back with some information.
    “So far, I have received $1,000 donation from a kind-hearted Barbadian. When I hear from the airlines, then I would know exactly what I am working with. I am hoping that the $1,000 can do for those who want to go on Saturday, but if it doesn’t, the church will put the difference. The challenge now is to get the rest home when they are ready. I am making an appeal to Barbadians to assist. I will speak with a lawyer about setting up a fund to assist them.”

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2019/01/03/stranded-haitians-still-at-salvation-army-hostel-for-now/


  9. @Bush Tea

    All very pertinent questions but doesn’t the burden of a response lie on those who wish to leave or reform CARICOM? Only Hal Austin has stated a preference for a federated Caribbean. Everyone else has just “kicked the can down the road”.

    So CARICOM and its alter ego CSME do not provide a way forward for Barbados says the maddening crowd but then what does?


  10. @ Ping Pong
    How do you manage to interject a ‘BUT’ here….?
    The questions are pertinent in that the answers to them SHOULD be the basis on which we go forward.

    The problem is that we all have different answers – and hence, different ideas of where ‘going forward’ is…

    If (as seems to be your wont) you see success as our being part of a larger entity, then CARICOM is an option, and the costs involved in being part of it will be well spent.
    If however, ‘success’ turns out to be a completely different concept, then such costs (and many other distractions) would actually be counterproductive to our best long term interests.

    Bushie need not tell you…
    One does not seek to solve a problem before understanding exactly what the problem is in the first place
    ….and CERTAINLY not by blindly reacting to the symptoms.

  11. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    A few things in the order they come to mind.

    ONE.

    Could anyone give one functional intraregional experience where CARICOM has worked for ALL OF ITS MEMBERS AND PRODUCED SOMETHING FOR ITS MEMBERS BENEFIT?

    TWO.

    FACILITATING REGIONAL TRAVE.

    De ole man WILL NOT SPEAK OF the fiasco of LIAT and regional travel.

    Nor will de ole man extrapolate on the logistics of a Ferry relative go (a) its upkeep (b) the type nor (c) its docking requirements ALL OF WHICH ARE THINGS THAT DAVID COME SING A SONG DOES NOT KNOW but as his usual want, talks about, because David got a mouth.

    What I can talk about this is the Advances Passenver Information System that the United States had to give Barbados in 2018.

    This is itself THE MOZT SERIOUS INDICTMENT OF REGIONAL INTEGRATION OF CARICOM.

    And it is an even more serious injustice and disservice by David Commissiong who deserves to be hung at dawn for this aspect alone for the scum that he is AND WILL FOREVER BE TO DE OLE MAN.

    Wunna are some nasty self hating fvcked and motherchuckers who, WHILE WUNNA PRETENDS DAT WUNNA WANTS REPERATIONS AND ALL DAT are never haters

    But you David Commissiong are the most serious of the haters of self who, having left the physical surroundings of that junkie corner at the geography room, BECAUSE OF THE MELANIN PROGRESSION THAT COMES WITH AGE, not seek to pretend that you are blacker that the rest of us with this CARICOM POSTURING.

    YOU ARE NOT WORTHY TO EVEN PEN THIS MESSAGE.

    And speaking of people who are not worthy to carry massages

    You, David Durant need to get hit with a fvcking lightning bolt as you out front like Philly with these Haitains but are devoid of any similar disposition for bajans.

    But I WILL REPAY YOU SAITH HE WHO HATH CREATED ALL THINGS.

    YOU ARE LUKEWARM & HE GOING SPIT YOU OUT…


  12. @Bush Tea

    I am not arguing for or against CARICOM. It is what it is. I fully agree with you that we need to establish where we want to go before embarking on a journey to “somewhere”. Who is doing such analysis and leading us in such introspection? It seems CARICOM is the default position.


  13. @ Ping Pong
    Who is doing such analysis and leading us in such introspection?
    It seems CARICOM is the default position.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Boss, if you are waiting on some guru to do this introspection for you
    then you are putting the high esteem in which you are held by Bushie at serious risk.

    This introspection is a HIGHLY personal pursuit that ALL intelligent people carry out.
    The net national response is simply a reflection of the collective individual positions.

    Where individuals mostly adopt the ‘default’ position (which happens to be the albino-centric inclinations of our world) we then tend to default to national positions based on ‘get rich quick’ schemes such as over-borrowing, CARICOM, tourism, FDI type schemes etc.
    …what Bushie calls brass bowlery.

    Taking up default positions in a failed world is tantamount to following herd behavior
    and almost guaranteed to end in the public market as lamb chops…


  14. Piece
    You asked…
    ..”Could anyone give one functional intraregional experience where CARICOM has worked for ALL OF ITS MEMBERS AND PRODUCED SOMETHING FOR ITS MEMBERS BENEFIT?”

    Before the devastating tsunami in Indonesia, they were no widespread tsunami education, awareness, nor WARNING SYSTEMS in place.

    Today, through mitigation, there is a comprehensive awareness of, an educational movement in and a network of bouys to initiate early tsunami warnings throughout the Caribbean and beyond.. thanks to……

  15. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Nineofnine

    And I guess with that tsunami warning system achievement you can see that the prolific list of non performance issues of CARICOM now screams at you AS IT SHOULD, DOES IT NOT?

    Do me a favour.

    Do a calculation of the monies spent on CARICOM since its launch on the salaries, its operations, conferences AND JUXTAPOSE THE MONETARY BENEFITS OR ITS INTANGIBLE CONTRIBUTIONS and share that with us please.


  16. Catching my butt in the US and a cheapskate as cwell but would donate to charitable causes….
    Went to Salvation Army site and was unable to do so…


  17. A Barbados delegation is to hold talks next week with officials from the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
    A government statement said that the team from the Ministry of International Business will be attending the Forum on Harmful Tax Practice (FHTP) from January 9 to 11.(Quote)

    Isn’t this a rightful job for Caricom, rather than a collection of farm-size island individually? Has it been lost on them that they are negotiating with OECD as a union? Another failure of regional politics.


  18. Piece
    You are asking for an audit.. whooa, who paying the bill… lol.
    CARICOM is a very large organization with multiple institutions and organs, surely the operation costs per month is in the millions, likewise, those costs are funded by contributions of it’s member states.

    Certainly there is a PR entity that informs the community of their intents and achievements.. Their website need to be more in-depth as well as having an increase media presence to disclose of the
    activities ..my thoughts


  19. Five months after removing visa requirements for Haitians to enter Barbados, Government is tinkering with the idea of placing new travel restrictions on the French-speaking neighbour.(Quote)


  20. @Mariposa,

    Have you noticed our esteemed ambassador to Caricom writing in Barbados Today about Barrow as the architect of a Caricom foreign policy?
    Maybe David BU will publish the whole thing.

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