December 29th signing day
Basseterre -- St. Kitts -- Nov. 21, 2009 -- The new Treaty of the
Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) will be signed in the
St. Kitts capital in December.
This was disclosed Friday in Anguilla by Grenada’s Prime Minister Hon.
Tillman Thomas at the conclusion of the historic 50th meeting of the
OECS Authority.
A CMC Report said that the Grenada Prime Minister, Hon. Tillman Thomas,
deputising for OECS Chairman, the Hon. Dr. Denzil L. Douglas, who is
also the Prime Minister of St. Kitts and Nevis, who chaired the
meeting, told reporters that the signing of the new treaty on December
29th in St. Kitts will be preceded by a special meeting of the
Authority to “consider the treatment of recommendations and the draft
Treaty arising from the public consultations” in the all the islands.
Prime Minister Thomas said that the new OECS Treaty will come into
effect in June 2010, the 30th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty
of Basseterre.
A statement issued by the Montserrat government, said the British
Overseas Territory will not have to negotiate its position within the
establishment of the OECS Economic Union, one of the measures contained
in the new treaty.
Montserrat’s Chief Minister Hon. Ben Meade had earlier declared that it
would be a “travesty if in reshaping the Treaty of Basseterre,
Montserrat...is asked to choose whether we would be welcome as an equal
partner within the OECS Economic Union.
“We do not wish to negotiate for our rights of belonging neither should
we retreat to a choice of being included or being left out in the cold.
Montserrat insists that all full members should automatically be part
of the new body without seeking permission from those on whose colonial
doorsteps we continue to loiter,” the recently elected Chief Minister
said.
But when the OECS summit ended on Friday, Meade said he had been given
clarification from his colleagues regarding Montserrat’s position.
“The OECS Economic Treaty is intended to further cement the integration
of the member states, which include Anguilla, Antigua & Barbuda,
the British Virgin Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat, St. Kitts
and Nevis, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines. Montserrat
was one of the founding members of the OECS when it was established
with the signing of the Treaty of Basseterre in 1981,” the Montserrat
government statement said.
It said the draft treaty includes the process of removing barriers to
trade between national markets in goods, services, movement of capital
and labour forces, which will transform the islands into a single
financial and economic space.
Eleven sectors have been listed in the treaty for joint action. They
include civil aviation, agriculture, tourism, education, environmental
sustainability, marine, disaster response and telecommunications.
Prime Minister Thomas told reporters the sub-regional leaders had given
serious consideration to the emotive subject of freedom of movement.
He said the leaders also reviewed the harmonisation of immigration laws and the social security systems.
The ongoing global and economic crisis was also discussed during the two-day meeting.
St. Vincent and the Grenadines Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves and
his Dominican counterpart Roosevelt Skerritt, both of whom have crucial
electoral matters were not present at the meeting that was also
attended by former Jamaica Prime Minister, Mr. P.J. Patterson and the
former Commonwealth Secretary General Sir Shridath Ramphal.