St Vincent PM Talks Free Movement of Caribbean Nationals Through CARICOM Member States

ST AUGUSTINE, Trinidad — “A more mature, more profound regionalism,” says Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, prime minister of St Vincent and the Grenadines, is the only way that regional governments and peoples can tackle the social and economic challenges as well as deal with the frequent natural disasters. This approach, he challenged, “ought to be a noise in the blood, an echo in the bone of our Caribbean civilization”.

A packed audience was present for his address, the third in the Distinguished Open Lecture series hosted by The University of the West Indies (UWI) St Augustine focusing on CARICOM: exploring its usefulness to the region and its future, following its 40th anniversary celebrations under a year ago.

A signatory of the 2001 Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas establishing the Caribbean Community including the CARICOM Single Market and Economy on behalf of the government and people of St Vincent and the Grenadines, Gonsalves was ideally placed to review the Shanique Myrie case in the context of community law for the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) as envisioned by the 22nd meeting of the Conference of Heads of State.

In exploring the topic, “Free Movement of People, Shanique Myrie and Our Caribbean Civilization”, he noted that the 2007 Conference decision further allowed all CARICOM nationals an automatic stay of six months upon arrival “in order to enhance their sense that they belong to, and can move in the Caribbean Community, subject to the right of member states to refuse undesirable entry and to prevent persons from becoming a charge on public funds”.

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