MEETING IN MARGARITAThe Greater Caribbean This Week Norman Girvan Margarita
Island, the site of the 3rd ACS Summit on December 11-12, is a place where
the insular and the mainland Caribbean meet. Politically it is part of
mainland Venezuela, lying just off the coast of that country about 200
kilometres east of Port of Spain. But in geography and economics it is
very much a typical Caribbean island, with white sand, palm-fringed
beaches encircling a lushly forested mountainous interior. Its size and
population (350,000 people) would place it in the middle rankings of
CARICOM’s island member states and, like most Caribbean islands, it
depends heavily on tourism. Margarita’s
role in connecting the two sides of the Caribbean has deep historical
roots. It was here that the 33 year-old Simon Bolivar landed in 1816 to
prepare for his second--and decisive--military campaign against Spanish
rule on the mainland that finally ended with the independence of what is
now Venezuela, Colombia, Panama, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia. History
records that Bolivar’s expedition of 250 men and several schooners had
sailed from Haiti, where it had been equipped with supplies furnished by
General Petion. Petion understood the strategic importance to Haiti of the
abolition of slavery on the mainland that was an integral part of the
Bolivarian mission. His assistance to Bolivar was one of the earliest
recorded acts of pan-Caribbean solidarity in the cause of collective
freedom. Before
reaching Haiti, Bolivar had spent seven months in Jamaica after leaving
Cartagena de Indias on the Colombian coast. In Jamaica he found the
inspiration to write a visionary and prophetic document on the future of
Spanish America, the famous Jamaica Letter. Today, a statue of Bolivar
stands in Kingston, overlooking the burial place of Jamaica ‘s
National Heroes. Coincidentally,
the ACS enterprise was also launched in Cartagena de Indias, for it was
there that the Convention setting up the Association was signed at a
meeting of Presidents and Prime Ministers of the Greater Caribbean in July
1994. Since
then the ACS has come a long way. It has established a solid foundation
for functional cooperation in its four focal areas of trade, maritime and
air transport, sustainable tourism and the management of natural
disasters. Besides its 25
members and three associate members, it has 16 Observer countries and five
Social Partners drawn from the private sector and the NGO and academic
community. Puerto Rico and at least two of the French Caribbean
Departments (now represented through France) have shown interest in
joining in their own right. Cooperation
agreements have been signed with a number of regional and international
organizations and several others are in the pipeline, notably with the
OPEC Fund for International Development, whose President will be a special
guest at the Summit. In
keeping with the Summit theme of Consolidation of the Greater
Caribbean, one of its significant results expected is the signing
of a Convention on Sustainable Tourism. This will provide an agreed legal
framework by which the different tourist sub-regions in the Caribbean
basin can cooperate in developing tourism along lines that are socially
and environmentally friendly and generate widespread economic benefits. (Ends)
Prof. Norman Girvan is Secretary General of the Association of Caribbean States. The views expressed are not necessarily the official views of the ACS. December 7, 2001 |
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