CARICOM Local News CARICOM marks Africa Day Sandy Deane26/05/20200247 views The Caribbean Community (CARICOM) on Monday reiterated a call for closer collaboration with Africa in fashioning a new global order as the region participated in Africa Day which it suggested strengthens ties between the mostly African-descended people of the region and their ancestral homeland. Prime Minister Mia Mottley, who issued a congratulatory message as CARICOM chair, outlined various initiatives being undertaken by both Africa and CARICOM to develop closer relations. But she expressed disappointment that the scheduled summit of the CARICOM-African Union for next month had to be postponed because of the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. ‘We look forward to that historic event taking place at the earliest possible opportunity for neither COVID nor history shall separate us from the united front that we can take for the benefit of our peoples,” she said. She said the new dynamic is contributing to the creation of a space for engagement and exchange of views on a common destiny and shared future. Mottley said: “So my friends let us have a voice in the international arena collectively as the world tries to find solutions to this crisis in a manner that does not leave those of us in Africa or those of us in the Caribbean behind.” She said it was also important to recognise that 75 years after the establishment of the United Nations and the Bretton Woods institutions – the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank – Africa and the Caribbean must decide “to come together to determine how best we can re-fashion how they function and how they look to ensure that we are not left out of the critical corridors of decision making”. She added it was vital “so that our peoples have an opportunity to bring that moral leadership” noting that at the time the UN was created “many of our states simply did not exist as independent countries. Mottley said: “Therefore the contemplation as to how and what the United Nations should do or the Bretton Woods institutions should do in fashioning their world did not take into account our existence and indeed our desires for a future that’s reflective of an inclusive partnership with our people.” The CARICOM chair said that as African Day should be viewed as a “milestone on the road, yea to a CARICOM-Africa cooperation, but not just simply for ourselves but for the world”. The Prime Minister continued: “Let us show that the people of African descent can make a meaningful contribution to this world and that indeed our experiences over the last few centuries, prior to our becoming independent, stand as a platform to give us the impetus to be able to show the world that there can be a better way, a more caring way, a more inclusive way and one that does not reflect the manner in which our countries were taken advantage of and worst of all, our people exploited.” She said both Africa and the Caribbean have a “solemn duty” to do right by their people. “Let us across CARICOM, across Africa rise to the occasion and make life better for our people. But we can only do so through collaboration and cooperation rooted in common values,” she added. Mottley said that the International Decade for People of African Descent being led under the theme People of African Descent, Recognition, Justice and Development, must allow for an open discussion of the regions’ contribution to a modern world. She added: “The current discord regarding race relations, the injustices of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance emphasis the indisputable gaps that still exist in the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms for all. “Indeed we view the decade, not just as an opportunity to reflect on these injustices of the past, but a platform to advance the Caribbean’s call for reparatory justice to compensate for centuries of social and economic exclusion of people of African descent , which my friends regrettably persists until today.” Mottley said that it also presents a unique opportunity to take steps towards changing the narrative to recognition and appreciation of the significant contribution of African descendants to today’s global society. She declared: “We all know that we have a weaken multilateral system and the impulse of major individual countries to rush to look inwards in recent times in these unprecedented times indeed and to conduct themselves capriciously in their behaviour towards weaker states, all of these give us cause for the Caribbean Community and Africa to reach out to each other and to work together. ‘We know that our world faces many many challenges and in this recent crisis of the world health crisis in the form of the coronavirus, COVID 19, there has been a corrosive economic and social impact on all of our countries and our people. “Indeed it has brought out the best solidarity and equally the worst in us, selfish unilateralism,” Mottley said, adding “we have now to ask if this is the kind of international relations that we would wish for our global community. “We in the Caribbean have argued that more than ever there is a need for a global leadership initiative, not rooted only in the voices and powers of governments but also with those who have capacity to influence a people in how they behave, in how they react, how they interact with one another and what they say. “Because it is up to us to root this global leadership initiative in the moral leadership that gives our individual citizens rights and opportunities that have been denied to them over the course of the last few centuries.”