UK Pledges Support For Caribbean
The British Government will not turn its back on the Caribbean, said UK Foreign Secretary William Hague as he addressed the opening ceremony of the Seventh Biennial UK-Caribbean Forum in Grenada on Friday night.
In a brief speech, Foreign Secretary Hague told an audience of Prime Ministers, Chief Ministers, Foreign Ministers, High Commissioners and other senior officials that his Government had no plans to close any more embassies in the Caribbean but rather to open more as a sign of its commitment to strengthen relations with the Caribbean.
He noted that the people of the Caribbean had played a pivotal role in shaping the British Society for hundreds of years.
Rt. Hon Mr Hague said, “From Mary Seacole’s contribution to nursing to Lewis Hamilton’s sporting achievements, Britons of Caribbean origin have contributed to every walk of like in our country.”
He stressed that the UK valued the bonds between both regions and as such would invest further in that relationship.
“We want to build a new partnership between Britain and the Caribbean that creates opportunities on all sides – in development, climate change, the economy, security and foreign policy,” he stated noting that the details of their support would be discussed during the session on Saturday morning.
The UK Delegation has been deemed one of the strongest and largest ever to attend the Forum. It includes the CEO of the UK Trade and Investment and the Chair of the Serious Organized Crime Agency together with other senior officials.
St Kitts and Nevis Foreign Minister Sam Condor had linked this to the importance that the UK attached its relationship with the Caribbean. The UK Foreign Secretary underscored this, noting that Britain was “very conscious of the value and significance of the relationships within the Caribbean and the many opportunities they brought.”
The CARICOM Secretary-General Irwin LaRocque had also weighed in noting that the UK and the Caribbean had been friends and partners for a long time and were intimately familiar with each other’s’ challenges. This, he stated, “must count for something as we go to this new level in our relations, even in the context of a radically changed world.”
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