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A tribute by Ambassador David Comissiong

This coming Monday, the 21st of January 2019, is the 99th anniversary of the birth of Barbadian national hero Right Excellent Errol Walton Barrow, and will be celebrated in Barbados as “Errol Barrow  Day” – a national public holiday.

In light of the recent happenings in the Organization of American States (OAS) when, on having to deal with a Resolution that purported to delegitimize the inauguration of Nicolas Maduro as President of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela, our CARICOM member states found themselves divided on the issue, with some of them voting for the Resolution, others voting against, and some abstaining, I would like to focus this tribute to Mr Barrow on his role as an architect of the concept of a collective CARICOM foreign policy.

It was at the historic Seventh Commonwealth Caribbean Heads of Government Conference held at Chaguaramas in Trinidad that the idea of converting the Caribbean Free Trade Association (CARIFTA) into a Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM), as well as the idea equipping the new CARICOM with a collective foreign policy were born.

The date was October 1972, and at that time there were only four independent Commonwealth Caribbean nations : namely, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, and Barbados, and these newly independent states were led by Michael Manley, Eric Williams, Forbes Burnham, and Errol Barrow respectively.

It was a time of great tension in the affairs of the world – the United States of America (USA) was ablaze with anti-Vietnam war protests; the Black Power and anti-colonial challenges to national and international structures of domination were going strong; and the so-called “Cold War” between the USA and the Soviet Union was still at a dangerous peak.

Indeed, by 1972, the Caribbean had come to be regarded as one of the primary theatres of the “Cold War”, with the USA making every conceivable effort to isolate and subvert the revolutionary Fidel Castro-led government of Cuba.

We need to recall that when—in 1959—the Cuban Revolution triumphed, that the new revolutionary Cuban government entered a Western hemisphere environment that was organized around the OAS—a multi-lateral organization dominated by the USA and dedicated to a USA inspired anti-Communist mission.

Indeed, in 1954, at the instigation of a USA steeped in Mc Carthy era anti-Communism, the OAS had issued the “Declaration of Caracas” which declared that all Marxist revolutionary ideology was intrinsically alien to the Western Hemisphere, and that Marxist revolutionary movements were to be treated as foreign invasions of the Hemisphere.

It was not surprising therefore that as early as June 1959, the USA began pressing the OAS to take punitive actions against Cuba—a founder member of the OAS, but now led by a revolutionary socialist Government.

In August 1960, the USA not only orchestrated a condemnation of Cuba at the OAS on the ground of Cuba’s acceptance of economic assistance from the Soviet Union, but also urged Latin American states to break off diplomatic relations with Cuba – an urging that Venezuela and Colombia adhered to in 1961.

And then the “coup de grace” came in January 1962 when, at the 8th Consultative Meeting of OAS Foreign Ministers in Uruguay, the OAS suspended Cuba’s membership, thereby effectively expelling Cuba from the OAS!

This was then followed by the US compiling a so-called “black list” of all countries still trading with Cuba and threatening to cut off US economic and military assistance to them.

But even this was seemingly not enough for the anti-Cuba forces, and during the 9th Consultative Meeting of Foreign Ministers held in Washington DC in July 1964, a resolution was passed urging all governments of the Western Hemisphere to break diplomatic relations with Cuba.

And—sad to say—in the following years, every single Western Hemisphere nation except Mexico and Canada fell in line with the OAS stipulation and either broke diplomatic relations with Cuba or refused to recognize the revolutionary Republic of Cuba!

This then was the scenario facing the four independent Commonwealth Caribbean countries—all newly installed members of the OAS—in October 1972!

And, needless-to-say, the leadership of the OAS was insisting that the four new Caribbean member states must adhere to the by then well established, USA supported, policy of non-recognition and isolation of revolutionary Cuba.

The magnificent response of the Right Excellent Errol Barrow and his fellow Commonwealth Caribbean leaders—Manley, Williams and Burnham—was to issue the following historic Declaration:-

“The Prime Ministers of Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica, and Trinidad and Tobago, meeting together during the Heads of Government Conference at Chaguaramas, have considered the state of their relations with the Government of Cuba and the obligations which the OAS has sought to impose upon its members in regard to relations with that Government; and make the following statement:

(1)    The independent English-speaking Caribbean states, exercising their sovereign right to enter into relations with any other sovereign state and pursuing their determination to seek regional solidarity and to achieve meaningful and comprehensive economic cooperation amongst all Caribbean countries will seek the early establishment of relations with Cuba, whether economic, diplomatic or both.

(2)    To this end, the independent English-speaking Caribbean states will act together on the basis of agreed principles.”

Here then were the four smallest and youngest states of the entire Western hemisphere standing on principle; courageously speaking “truth to power”; and setting a noble and principled example for all the other nations of the hemisphere to follow!

Indeed, six months later—in April 1973 – Mr Barrow gave an address to the Empire Club of Toronto, Canada, and explained the significance of the unified Caribbean stance on Cuba as follows:-

“……we have managed in our four countries, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana and Barbados to sustain our independence to the extent that we were considered to have committed an act of defiance in October last year when we took a lead in the western hemisphere in deciding to open diplomatic relations with the Republic of Cuba, much to the chagrin of our neighbours to the north.

But it demonstrates that the developing countries can take a lead in conditioning the minds of people who should know better…………And I have no doubt that the other countries which are mightier and more powerful than the four small independent countries in the Caribbean will soon shamefacedly or not, have to follow suit……

And we cannot sit down in the Caribbean and wait for our strategy to be dictated or governed by the political or other economic or social prejudices of people in other countries because to entertain such a belief would be an abandonment of the sovereignty that we believe in and we have never subscribed to the doctrine of limited sovereignty. And I have been, myself, very firm right from the beginning of Barbados’ independence that we would be friends of all and satellites of none.”

Happy Errol Barrow Day to all my Barbadian and Caribbean brothers and sisters! Long may the spirit of Errol Barrow live in our beautiful sovereign Caribbean homeland!

 


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217 responses to “Errol Barrow — Architect of a Collective CARICOM Foreign Policy”


  1.         The ambassador could also have mentioned the discordant foreign policy as it relates to some Caricom states spilt on whether to recognize Taiwan or China.      
    

  2. “Cuba has nothing but misery to show for itself — and an extraordinary ability to delude itself and many others” — Alvaro Vargas Llosa.


  3. Socialism at its best…The Castro’s in Cuba is the Richest of the Nations people, they OWN Cuba, they even made the Forbes List as the Richest people, everyone else Sucks Salt. With Socialism only the leaders have money and they produce nothing but Rhetoric, Dependency, Destitution, Poverty, Starvation and Want, Tyranny, Loss of All Freedoms, whether Religious, Political or Cultural with people fleeing their countries at any opportunity. People vote for socialism because they think they are going to get something for nothing. Like a piece of cheese on a rat trap.

    Commie Sing Song is a Communist to De bone… Michael Manley was a Communist, look what happened to Jamaica all those years ago and they still have not recovered. Eric Williams was a Socialist and Trinidad has suffered the effects of it, including Devaluation, if it wasn’t for oil they would be a-me- too Venezuela. Forbes Burnham was also Communist …look what has happened in Guyana, their only hope now is oil which Venezuela is trying to claim or tief! And Barbados our Beautiful Bim, Socialism was introduced by Barrow and the culture of Socialism has put us in the Position that we are in, where are we now people? At the bottom of the barrel, Drowning in Endless Taxation.

    As for “Caribbean Free Trade Association (CARIFTA) into a Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM), as well as the idea equipping the new CARICOM with a collective foreign policy were born”, which is okay because of the financial agreements for all. But when you want to make us have One Foreign Policy Voice instead of our own Sovereign Voice, we will become Ruled by an un-elected Bureaucracy like Europe with Disastrous immigration policies and with Calamitous ideologies that will Subvert the Freedoms of its Populations, example Carbon Tax in France that is causing a Revolution against the Globalist. The bigger Countries Ideologies will Dominate and we may become like Jamaica or Haiti.

    Socialism is Communism with Patience…Commie Sing Song does not have the people’s best interest at heart only the Desire for Power by climbing on the Backs of those who went before him, and to grind other people’s faces in the Ground pretending to be helping them.

    Every Nation of the earth that has gone Socialist has suffered not only economically but Death of their Populations by the Millions. With the aid of those like-minded as Commie Sing Song who poses a Danger to the Commonwealth by Stealthily revitalizing Communism by using Comrades with the same mind-set that have brought Poverty and Devastation on their countries to date.

    Is that you Desire for Barbados Commie Sing Song?

    https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=2356548791240734&set=gm.953059371550102&type=3&theater


  4. To Freedom Cries, You are very full of yourself this is why Barbados has the world’s 3rd highest GDP and the highest in the entire region, people like you love to point out other’s faults but can’t see your own. Get off your high horse.


  5. This writer was always persuaded that the failure of the Communist Bloc was the single most important event of the last century. For it exposed small states to a unipolarity which has left them all subject to the fancies of Washington.

    Even larger, resource rich, countries of the South are similarly exposed in this ‘brave new world’ of Huxley coming from Washington.

    We trust that those who need to erect the old Cold War, its isms and schisms, based entirely on the rightness of capitalism and an excessive hatred for socialism or communism would reach a point where a careful analysis could be undertaken about that epoch, free of emotional baggage and dominant ignorance.

    Indeed, Russia today is as capitalist as America, if not more, but still the Americans need such an enemy that the militarists in Washington have launched a New Cold War.

    We should ask why that could be. Why does Russia have to be an enemy of the West after the death of communism? Maybe a careful deliberation could lead to the unavoidable conclusion that this had nothing to do with isms.

    This should inform those who seem to believe that socialism or communism must be eternally hated, even as far as refusing to engage in a historical analysis, dispassionately.

    That misguided attitude has been so prevalent that it has, for a century now, prevented a serious interrogation of Marx’s foundational critique of capitalism. Certainly, capitalism would have benefited from such a discourse and would have avoided the current excesses.

    It cannot be denied that EWB had a social conscious. But there are dangers implicit in presenting one side of the Barrow ledger without all the others.

    For example, it was Barrow who passed the Public Order Act to control the Black Power Movement.

    ……………………………………………………………………………….


  6. The question is why did Barbados abstain .
    In the interest of transparency we need to hear a statement from the Minister of Foreign affairs.


  7. @pacha

    Love your reference to Russia being as capitalist as Washington. It makes a nonsense of the label Commie does it not?


  8. I imagine the late Errol Barrow will be squirming in his grave at the thought of praise from a commie parasite and seditious POS like Commissiong.
    Why oh why do filth like him get space to spread their poison? It is more than enough that he is attached to the long suffering taxpayer like the tick he is.


  9. What a lot of people do not understand about Castro and Che Guevara is the fact that after the revolution, Castro turned to America for help, and America refused to help him. So Castro then turned his attention to the Soviet Union who betrayed him during the Cuban Missile Crisis by going behind his back and negotiating with the Americans.
    Castro, at this point never again trusted the Soviets and therefore turned his attention to Communist China for help…


  10. Castro, did what he thought was in the best interested of the Cuban people, and he did it in a world dominated European imperialism and colonialism. And to this day he is still reverence in the collective psyche of the majority of the people in the Caribbean, and throughout Central, South and Latin American…and finally, we must not forget that the forces of European imperialism and colonialism created the likes of Castro, Che, Burnham, Jegan, Bishop etc …


  11. More drivel from the master of it. Castro and his murderous psychopathic sidekick Guevara were only interested in themselves and power. The Cuban people paid the price of Commissiong’s heros’ megalomania as the Venezuelans are doing now.
    You can bet some morons on here who shall remain nameless still have Che tee shirts, the onanists.


  12. Are you two able to make contact with the substantive point of the writing? Is there merit in the region being able to articulate a collective foreign policy position, what should it be?


  13. There is no merit in it IMHO David. Like rats in a sack, each country will be jostling for preeminence just as we see in the soon to collapse EUSSR.
    Barbados was, and despite its current approach to failed state status, still is in a class above other West Indian countries, and MUST strive to regain its position. There will be no help from the others.


  14. Never have and never will endorse an sayings ..idealogies or revisionist history coming from the mouth of Commissiong
    The man is a snake oil salesman to be avoided at all cost.
    Buyers Beware


  15. @45govt

    You should reread Pacha’s comment, it sums it up. In essence you appear resigned to follow the foreign policy of first world states who have no problem blacklisting Venezuela and on the other hand dishing our a favoured trade status to Cuba.


  16. Small minds they say focus on the man and not the issue.


  17. Read what Mariposa said David.


  18. Mariposa

    The fact of the matter is the man has an unified vision of the Caribbean and the region, even if he does under the banner of political ideology…


  19. Read the blogmaster’s reply 45govt.


  20. BTW – Russia is no longer communists, did you not know?


  21. Now you are appreciating Pacha’s point. We buy in to irrelevant ideologies when a careful review of the political systems of China, Cuba, Russia etc are as capitalist as America.


  22. The only parts of Cuba, Venezuela and North Korea that are capitalist are the ruling elites. Always the same. No country anywhere, ever has benefitted from the slavery of communism.


  23. This Month is not only the Birth month of Errol Walton Barrow and Commie Sing Song knows it …

    This month marks the 60th anniversary of the triumph of the Cuban Revolution. One way to measure the failure of this prolonged exercise in despotism is to look at its changing narrative.

    http://www.bookwormroom.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Socialism-escape-from-Cuba.jpg


  24. Listen up David i have followed and listened carefully to every word coming out of the mouth of Commisiong and i have summed them all up to a realistic theme
    If it walks like a duck quack like a duck it must be a duck
    This man only after a few days of becoming ambassdor asked for an immigration policy to opened which allowed all and sundry to come into barbados without proper visa requirements
    Which in turned made Haitians adopted people of barbadians in a way which barbadians have to look out for their interest
    Hard to.imagine a person of his ilk who seems to be only interested in self being in higher leadership position and able to control the foreign policy of barbados


  25. All of the non-White people of the world with the exception of Japan have been victims of European Imperialist Exploitation and their genocidal colonialist practices…


  26. @45govt

    Why have you not dealt with the hypocrisy of the Western world giving a pass to China for example all in the name of economic greed? This is what the capitalism we speak of is defined.


  27. Note: Ethiopia is probably the only African country that has never been colonized by the European imperialists….


  28. @ David Where did I give the West a pass????? Show me.


  29. Good point David and this was more evident during George W. Bush Administration when he sold America down the river to China in support of his two illegal wars in Iraq and Afghanistan…


  30. @45govt

    It is a zero sum policy debate.

    >


  31. Ethiopia is really doing well now – perhaps it would be better off if it HAD been colonized by European Imperialists, rather than commie slime.

    “Haile Selassie’s was dethroned on 12 September 1974, when he was deposed by the Derg, a Soviet-backed Marxist–Leninist military dictatorship led by Mengistu Haile Mariam. The new Provisional Military Administrative Council established a one-party communist state in March 1975”

    Happy days…NOT, then or now.

  32. WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog Avatar
    WARU, Crazy & Unstable, Hogging the Blog

    “It cannot be denied that EWB had a social conscious. But there are dangers implicit in presenting one side of the Barrow ledger without all the others.

    For example, it was Barrow who passed the Public Order Act to control the Black Power Movement.”

    It was also Barrow who gave Simpson his start in life…with black taxpayer’s money…the other side also needs to be told and stop romanticizing evil, self destructive shitty actions post 1966 that only sold out the majority population…to white and other criminal minorities..that now sees the island and the majority population…RENDERED HELPLESS…


  33. David

    Look at the hypocrisy of America: during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars almost everything in America said made in China … a country supposedly with one of the worse human right record in history… but yet the great democracy in the world (America) was still doing business with the big Communist country in the world China…

  34. David Comissiong Avatar
    David Comissiong

    FOR THE RECORD : The policy to remove the VISA requirements for Haitians wishing to travel to Barbados was established and enunciated BEFORE David Comissiong took up duties as Ambassador to CARICOM.

    FURTHERMORE, the CARICOM Legal Affairs Committee has confirmed that it is a legal requirement of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas.


  35. “This man only after a few days of becoming ambassdor asked for an immigration policy to opened which allowed all and sundry to come into barbados without proper visa requirements
    Which in turned made Haitians adopted people of barbadians in a way which barbadians have to look out for their interest…”

    Come on…..


  36. You know that’s not true.


  37. @Artax

    Ac sees everything through a political lense and has and will continue to lie to support.

    In fact she has zero credibility on the blog.


  38. Previous govt kept the policy in place without a rush to opened its borders like Commisiong and this administration did
    Well what was the outcome of this rushed open visa policy initiated by govt and Commissiong
    A result that Haitian were left stranded in barbados having no means of support and Commisiong asking barbadians for financial support in aiding their departure

    As for Commisiong trying to attached himself to Barrow coattails
    Commissiong should avoid at all cost by remebering the words of Barrow friends of all and satellite of none
    Right now Commisiong satellite shines brightly over the mountains of Venezuela
    Cant remeber Barrow having a satellite shining any where in this world outside barbados


  39. You go girl.
    Now, it’s like five to one….
    Keep up de pace


  40. @theOGazzerts

    You do a disservice to the blogmaster by encouraging lies and inaccurate statements.

    >


  41. My sentiments as well.


  42. What is inaccurate about Mariposa’s comments? Can anyone point to any practical use Commissiong has been to anyone but himself?


  43. David is Freedom Crier Welcomed to the Conversation …If so why is Freedom’s every comment in Moderation and takes hours before appearing?

    This Month is not only the Birth month of Errol Walton Barrow and Commie Sing Song knows it …
    This month marks the 60th anniversary of the triumph of the Cuban Revolution. One way to measure the failure of this prolonged exercise in despotism is to look at its changing narrative.

    http://www.bookwormroom.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Socialism-escape-from-Cuba.jpg


  44. The courts agreed
    My question to him what was his motive
    In what way woukd have fingerprinting remove the Human rights of Barbados
    Commisiong my question to You what is your alternative
    Needles to say the spin off from this motion is now being revealed in the streets with more to come
    Commisiong you speak a good game about Human Rights but what about the Human rights of the people if Venezuela a country and people u professes to.love
    Where is your voice to help and aided in the violation of these peoples rights by Maduro


  45. Interesting Read…Cuba, 60 Years On — Misery Is Communism’s Only Real Legacy

    In the beginning, the Bearded Ones vowed that Cuba would become an economic superpower. In 1961 Che Guevara promised that by 1980 (the year of the Mariel exodus of boat people) Cuba’s per capita income would overtake that of the United States.

    Communism soon killed any possibility of prosperity. So the Revolution changed the narrative: Its “ultima ratio” was now the Cold War and Cuba’s role in the planetary struggle between socialism and capitalism — a way to justify Cuba becoming a Soviet colony. The rhetoric also pointed to social achievements that were largely the legacy of the pre-revolutionary years. Though underdeveloped, in the 1950s Cuba had Latin America’s third-highest per capita income, third-longest life expectancy, and lowest mortality rate.

    When the Soviet Union collapsed, the narrative changed again. It was time to enlarge the already disproportionate role Cuba had played during the Cold War (sending soldiers to fight in Africa, for instance) by turning it into a world bastion of socialism after Moscow’s “treason.”

    Since the end of the Soviet subsidy — several billion dollars a year — had uncovered the truth about Cuba’s miserable economy, Fidel Castro also developed a narrative based on a heroic “special period” in which Cubans would re-enact the resistance of Thermopylae against the Persians. Anything that could generate some foreign exchange and social peace was rhetorically justified — even the emergence of a few small private businesses, the arrival of foreign capital in partnership with the Cuban state, tourism (until then symbolic of the ancient regime’s subservience to the United States), and prostitution.


  46. Cuba: Subsidized Communism

    Then came Hugo Chavez’s oil subsidy. The heroic narrative focused on the domestic front went by the wayside. It was time to talk about world revolution. Cuba’s dependence on Venezuela was concealed under rhetoric that depicted Castro as the inspiration of Venezuela’s 21st-century Socialism. The new planetary struggle justified Cuba being close to Islamic fundamentalist theocrats (Iran), state-capitalist nationalists (China), and others.

    Venezuela’s subsidy provided an opportunity for Cuba to export “professional services,” sending thousands of doctors, nurses, and teachers overseas in exchange for dollars. This was close to slavery since the host country would pay the salaries to the Cuban government in dollars and the Castro regime would pay the doctors and teachers a tiny fraction of the money … in Cuban pesos! The professionals were not allowed to take their families with them lest they defect. Under the new narrative, this cruel exploitation was a service to humanity.

    When Fidel Castro fell ill in 2006 the narrative evolved. His brother Raul, a China admirer, could not steer too far away from Fidel’s legacy but allowed more Cubans to engage in small, closely controlled entrepreneurial activities and invited new foreign capital to partner with the state.


  47. Still A Police State

    The narrative then pushed the fight against bureaucracy and corruption (a Castro legacy!) and the need to prolong the Revolution by promoting a new generation — hence the appointment of Miguel Diaz-Canel as “president,” with Raul in control as first secretary of the Communist Party and chief of the armed forces (which control all sizable capitalist ventures). The new constitution dropped the word “communism” but retained the one-party state.

    As the Venezuelan subsidy dwindled due to Chavismo’s catastrophe, Castro expanded the limited reforms with a narrative based on modernization.

    Today the Revolution continues to be a police state that brutally represses any form of dissidence, and its reforms have yielded nothing but failure. As the well-respected economist Carmelo Mesa-Lago has shown, the private sector represents no more than 7% of GDP. The country is severely undercapitalized (gross capital formation is one half of Latin America’s average); and agricultural and industrial production has shrunk in the last decade. The island’s largest source of foreign exchange continues to be the export of professional services, that grotesque euphemism.

    Sixty years on, Cuba has nothing but misery to show for itself — and an extraordinary ability to delude itself and many others.

    Vargas Llosa


  48. Now back to Pacha’s post at 12.01 a.m. I hope.


  49. 45gov

    We are pointing to the above vedio … anything else Sir?


  50. Pachamama January 21, 2019 12:01 AM

    This writer was always persuaded that the failure of the Communist Bloc was the single most important event of the last century. For it exposed small states to a unipolarity which has left them all subject to the fancies of Washington.

    Even larger, resource rich, countries of the South are similarly exposed in this ‘brave new world’ of Huxley coming from Washington.

    We trust that those who need to erect the old Cold War, its isms and schisms, based entirely on the rightness of capitalism and an excessive hatred for socialism or communism would reach a point where a careful analysis could be undertaken about that epoch, free of emotional baggage and dominant ignorance.

    Indeed, Russia today is as capitalist as America, if not more, but still the Americans need such an enemy that the militarists in Washington have launched a New Cold War.

    We should ask why that could be. Why does Russia have to be an enemy of the West after the death of communism? Maybe a careful deliberation could lead to the unavoidable conclusion that this had nothing to do with isms.

    This should inform those who seem to believe that socialism or communism must be eternally hated, even as far as refusing to engage in a historical analysis, dispassionately.

    That misguided attitude has been so prevalent that it has, for a century now, prevented a serious interrogation of Marx’s foundational critique of capitalism. Certainly, capitalism would have benefited from such a discourse and would have avoided the current excesses.

    It cannot be denied that EWB had a social conscious. But there are dangers implicit in presenting one side of the Barrow ledger without all the others.

    For example, it was Barrow who passed the Public Order Act to control the Black Power Movement.

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