No date set yet
Basseterre -- April 19, 2009 -- Caribbean leaders on
Saturday said United States President, the Hon. Barack Obama will
discuss economic aid, gun and drug smuggling and other issues in a
second round of private talks with them later this year.
After meeting with the U.S. president on the sidelines of a hemispheric
summit in Trinidad, Caribbean presidents and prime ministers described
a new tone in U.S. policy and expressed hope for closer ties.
Veteran Guyanese journalist, Bert Wilkinson reporting for the
Associated Press (AP) said St. Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister Hon. Dr.
Denzil L. Douglas and his Jamaican counterpart, Prime Minister Hon.
Bruce Golding disclosed that President Obama promised to ask the World
bank and the International Monetary Fund to consider boosting lending
to the region and the US would spend US$30 million to combat drug and
weapons trafficking.
“The U.S. is not lecturing to us anymore, but rather listening,” Guyana
President His Excellency Bharrat Jagdeo said, adding: “They need to
listen, and that is what we got.”
Caribbean leaders said they also asked Obama to oppose a crackdown on
so-called tax haven nations, insisting that offshore banking and
corporate registries are key to diversifying their island economies.
They gave no details on his response.
Canadian Prime Minister His Excellency Stephen Harper also met with the
Caribbean delegation on Saturday to review a pending free-trade
agreement between Canada and the Caricom trade bloc.
The new deal would replace a two-decade old agreement that now gives
Caribbean countries mostly duty-free access to Canadian gold, leather,
oil products and other goods.
A date for trade talks has not been set.