Thursday, April 25, 2024

Integration a must, says Mia

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Regional integration is no longer an option for Caribbean states, but the only way the region will be able to secure and maintain economic and social development, says Leader of the Opposition Barbados Labour Party Mia Mottley.Delivering the keynote address at the opening of a two-day Broadcasting Commission’s Regional Regulators Forum On Policy And Regulation in the electronic media in New Kingston, Jamaica, on Monday, Mottley said the media was one of the most important instruments to attaining this level of cooperation.She therefore called for the establishment of a Caribbean News Network, where the issues and concerns of Caribbean states could be shared and examined on a regional level.The Opposition Leader argued that open communication and broadcasting across the region would, in effect, improve the level of awareness and information among Caribbean states and help to create a greater level of collaboration.She bemoaned the fact that regional television corporations broadcast more programmes out of North America, instead of highlighting the various political and social issues of fellow West Indians.
Urgent need“There is an urgent need for a real time Caribbean News Network that allows the issues confronting our people to be heard, to be analysed and to be dealt with on a daily basis,” she proposed.“It matters to me what happens in Kingston (Jamaica) and Kingstown (St Vincent) and Bridgetown (Barbados), as it does in Georgetown (Guyana), and it matters to all of our people because it creates the opportunity for understanding,” she added.Mottley said the establishment of this real time television network for the region must be pursued urgently, “not as something that we can achieve in a year or two, but through a simple Memorandum of Understanding that allows for the sharing of content”.She further argued that the challenges of governance have drastically changed over thelast 20 years and so regionalism was needed now more than ever.“In a post-World Trade Organisation world, we had to remove non-tariff barriers and to reduce tariffs on a range of duties, such that the yields of import duties dropped significantly and government’s coffers felt the blow,” Mottley noted, adding that at the same time, regional governments were being required to spend money to restructure their domestic industries in order to be able to compete against those markets that now had access to the Caribbean.“So, those new additions to governance and to cost have meant that we have to come to grips with the fact that we are all in this together. Regional integration (therefore) is not an option for Caribbean people, but the only way in which we can ensure that those who have not made it on the train to escape poverty are now to be given the chance,” she said.She argued that this could only be done in the context of functional co-operation and regional integration. (Jamaica Observer.)

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