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Bonaire, Saba and St. Eustatius Moving to Establish Direct Ties with the Netherlands
- By S Coward
- Published 04-Oct-06
- Government, Politics, Int'l Relations
- Unrated
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Technical committees to be set up
Bonaire, Saba and St. Eustatius Moving to Establish Direct
Ties with the Netherlands
Bonaire---Oct.
4, 2006----They have no comprehension of the “jealous” feelings reigning on
sister islands Curaçao and St. Maarten. Bonaire, Saba and St. Eustatius are
going ahead to realise direct ties with the Netherlands. Their goal: creating a
better life for their citizens, with or without the bigger islands.
Bonaire’s
Commissioner Reginald “Yonchi” Dortalina said the trajectory of the smaller
islands and that of Curaçao and St. Maarten, which are seeking country status
within the Kingdom, were “totally different.”
“It
is not fair. You always hear that we are ballast. Now that we want to go, they
want to hold on to us. Let us go. If you hold on to me and help me, I could
agree, but if I have financial problems and you don’t help me, then you have to
let me go to the one that can help,” Dortalina said.
Saba’s
Commissioner Will Johnson said Curaçao and St. Maarten were “deceiving
themselves.” Instead of seeing the smaller islands as a threat, they should see
them as an example, he said.
Johnson
implied that the constitutional process had been St. Maarten’s agenda with that
island being the first to have a referendum in 2000. “They more or less forced
us to have a referendum. St. Maarten has been leaning back on everybody to get
separate status for them,” he said after the bilateral talks with the Dutch
Government in Bonaire Tuesday.
Statia’s
Commissioner Roy Hooker said he was taking no heed of jealousy statements.
“They (Curaçao and St. Maarten, ed.) have been traitors to the smaller islands.
It was the two more economically stable islands who pong on their chest. They
cut us off, threw us to the dogs and said find your way,” he said.
Hooker
said the smaller islands were now finding their way. He said it was not right
for Curaçao and St. Maarten, which he said had so many resources, to put their
“failures at the door” of the smaller islands.
“We
are suffering up to now because of what they are doing. We need a solution and
when we go to them, there is no solution to be had. They don’t think about the
smaller islands. They only think about themselves,” he said. Hooker said that
if they had to drag the Netherlands to the table “kicking and screaming” to
assist, they would do so.
The
smaller islands have been suffering, and that is why they decided to “take the
bull by the horns” and to directly approach the Netherlands, said Johnson.
“After all, we are responsible to our people to look after their needs. Curaçao
and St. Maarten have to solve the problems for themselves. We can’t wait any
longer,” he said, adding that they had already been waiting since St. Maarten’s
referendum.
Johnson
said the smaller islands had already had a “negative experience” when Aruba
left the Antillean constellation in 1986 and the smaller islands became
dependent on the Solidarity Fund, a system that had not worked properly and had
never been formalised. “What they expect us to do? Our people’s wish is direct
ties. That is what we are working out,” he said.
The
Netherlands, said Johnson, has been “reluctant” in assuming its
responsibilities, as stated in the Charter, to tap the Central Government on
its fingers and tell Willemstad it hasn’t been “acting correctly” where it
comes to the needs of the smaller islands. “We know and we see that a lot of
money is being spent, wasted in Curaçao. All we are asking for is equal
treatment,” he said.
Johnson
questioned how NAf. 2 million of the Telecommunications Bureau could have been
given to University of the Netherlands Antilles (UNA) as a gift, while the
Central Government only lent Saba money, charging interest, so the island could
pay its medical bills and its civil servants’ vacation allowances. He said the
Minister of Finance also hadn’t cooperated in solving the issue of the
Solidarity Fund.
According
to Hooker, members of the Antillean Council of Ministers have been thinking
“insular” lately, looking out only for the interest of their island, and with
the majority of the ministers coming from Curaçao, the Central Government has
gotten an “insular feel.”
Dortalina
said Curaçao and St. Maarten had an example to work with: Aruba. The smaller
islands, however, have to work on realising a new concept. “We have to create
the direct ties that now don’t exist. That means we have to move fast to keep
up so we can be ready for the others,” he said, referring to the target date of
July 2007 to realise new relations in the Kingdom.
Bonaire
Island Council member Ramoncito Booi (UPB) said especially Curaçao had no right
to complain. He said Curaçao was “already the Netherlands Antilles” with the
“political force” being there. “They should not be in a hurry,” he said,
implying that a new status would have more disadvantages than advantages.
“We
have a problem with the Antillean political structure and a Curaçao that is not
taking care of our problems. We have to look for other solutions and fast. The
Netherlands ultimately is responsible for us and we are holding it to that,”
said Booi.
