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Volume 15, Number 2
January 25, 2009

opinion

Also in this section:
Editorials: The grand alliance; and President Obama
Sirias, True cutarras and a master who makes them
E. Jackson, Drawing lines in the mayor's race
Obama, Inaugural address
Lerner, At the inauguration
N. Jackson, Impunity for torture would leave a precedent for future use
Butler, To support and defend the Constitution
Amnesty International, Closing Guantanamo prison was a good step
Pilgrim, Obama and Caribbean leaders
Friedman, A tricky situation that Obama inherits
Reporters Without Borders, Journalists shot in Venezuela
Human Rights Watch and its critics, Debate over Venezuela report
Wood, The ghost economics of Uribe's Colombia
Klimasch, California here we come
Bernal, The mayor's office and debates
Leis, Slow and quality-free advance in Panamanian education
Letters to the editor

Barack Obama, constructive engagement and Caribbean leadership
by Clarence E. Pilgrim

The inauguration was an historic moment. A warm sunshine of emotional goodwill spread across that country to touch the hearts of many, who were longing for what was once considered an insurmountable barrier to be crossed. Indeed many never thought that the time would be here and now.

The 44th president of the United States of America, Barack Hussein Obama, has managed to transform the words "change we can believe in," into a tangible array of hope and optimism, in a country besieged by international terrorism, financial crisis, an unpopular war and as many other challenges as there are stars and stripes on the American flag.

His personal ascension to the presidency has captured the imagination of generations of men and women around the world, who dare to have a bold vision and the determination of will to overcome both natural and unnatural obstacles. This is truly a time worth living in, at a time when living has become a journey of lessons awaiting the right answers.

Looking into the future of the United States now is like looking into a cloudy crystal ball, hoping to get a glimpse of a safe and certain path to follow in these uncertain times. What must the next step be?

Expectations are high, but there must be pragmatism about reaching for what may be attainable, and having the wisdom to avoid what cannot be realistically achieved.

Caribbean and US relations have not always been wheels turning in the smoothest of synchronization. The last Republican administration made many missteps by the way it undervalued its relationship with its southern neighbors adorning the Caribbean Sea. This attitude, it is hoped, will be a part of the change many Caribbean Community (CARICOM) leaders would be looking for.

I believe that it is the right time for CARICOM to develop a framework for "educating" the new administration about its agenda and what it hopes can be accomplished in the best interest of all parties concerned. The summit of the Americas to be held in April on the Caribbean "isle of the humming bird" also known as Trinidad, will be the first real opportunity for CARICOM to make a definitive first impression --- and you know what they say about first impressions.

In one paragraph of his inaugural address on the 20th January 2009, the new president said:

Our Founding Fathers, faced with perils we can scarcely imagine, drafted a charter to assure the rule of law and the rights of man, a charter expanded by the blood of generations. Those ideals still light the world, and we will not give them up for expediency's sake.

The similarities of a number of the human development experiences of the United States and CARICOM countries make the quoted words relevant when they are applied to the emergence of the Treaty of Chagaramas and the bold and dynamic leaders who made it materialize. It also gives a sense of the generations of visionary Caribbean men and women who continue to support the document now, and to its hopeful evolution into an instrument that will form the basis for CARICOM's inevitable political and economic integration.

While there is still time, the Caribbean leadership must create a realistic list of objectives, which are fine-tuned by consensus and sharpened by reason. From rising food costs to environmental issues, each topic must be a part of a whole and not a fragmented part in search of an ear.

Having given written support to the Obama candidacy from its earliest primary battles to its ultimate result, I will add my congratulations to this victory of hope and character over despair and hopelessness.

It is possible for CARICOM and the United States to work together to bring about a change that we all can believe in.


The author is an educator and senior civil servant in Antigua & Barbuda


Also in this section:
Editorials: The grand alliance; and President Obama
Sirias, True cutarras and a master who makes them
E. Jackson, Drawing lines in the mayor's race
Obama, Inaugural address
Lerner, At the inauguration
N. Jackson, Impunity for torture would leave a precedent for future use
Butler, To support and defend the Constitution
Amnesty International, Closing Guantanamo prison was a good step
Pilgrim, Obama and Caribbean leaders
Friedman, A tricky situation that Obama inherits
Reporters Without Borders, Journalists shot in Venezuela
Human Rights Watch and its critics, Debate over Venezuela report
Wood, The ghost economics of Uribe's Colombia
Klimasch, California here we come
Bernal, The mayor's office and debates
Leis, Slow and quality-free advance in Panamanian education
Letters to the editor

 
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