Beautiful Virgin Islands

Wednesday, Aug 27, 2025

New CARICOM Chairman John Briceno Optimistic

New CARICOM Chairman John Briceno Optimistic

The new chairman of the 15-member Caribbean Community (CARICOM) grouping, Prime Minister John Briceno, is optimistic about the region’s ability to deal with the challenges ahead. He says the region is ushering 2022 “with hope and optimism” noting that the past two years have seen all plans affected by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
Briceno, who is also the head of government in Belize, said that the virus has caused “profound social and economic turmoil,” in the region and that “the prospects for our recovery hinge on the urgent acceleration of vaccinations, which remains alarmingly low in our Community.

“Further delay in equitable access to vaccines will stress our health systems and personnel, and delay our economic recovery. Throughout the pandemic regional cooperation, collaboration and solidarity have been at the center of our national responses – a clear affirmation of the necessity and dividends of our integration.”

But Briceno said that notwithstanding the “immense challenges ahead and the inherent risks and vulnerabilities that have always accompanied our existence, the Community possesses the requisite capacities, strategies and plans, and the will and courage to forge a resilient and prosperous Caribbean Community”.

He said while responding to the pandemic “we have also been crafting the framework for a regional recovery which aligns with our aspirations for sustainable development and resilience”.

Briceno said that the work of the Community’s Special Ministerial Task Force on Food Production and Food Security will be critically important in the coming year, advancing actions to stimulate economic growth and fortifying our food systems against supply chain disruptions.

“The pandemic has underscored the importance of integrating digital technologies into our economic, social and governance structures. Therefore, to spur the digital transformation of our single Caribbean space, we will advance our Regional Digital Development Strategy”

Briceno, who assumes the chairmanship from Antigua and Barbuda’s Prime Minister, Gaston Browne, said that the outcome of United Nations Conference on Climate Change (COP26) has not provided the region “with sufficient time, space nor resources to confront the catastrophic, immediately and slow onset impacts of climate change occurring in our Small Island and Low-lying Coastal Developing States.

“We must be resolute in our demands and advocacy to ensure that the obligations and commitments both on emissions and financing are honored by the developed and G-20 countries,” Briceno said, adding that to maximize the effect of the region’s advocacy, the formation of strategic alliances is a key element.

“We will be seeking to build on the successful first CARICOM-Africa Summit which identified several areas for common action, including climate change and the application of a Multidimensional Vulnerability Index to allow for the inclusion of more than just income-based criteria to assess eligibility for concessionary finance.

“We welcome the approaches by our friends in the Pacific and the Indian Oceans, and look forward to consolidating our partnership with them, as we make common cause with fellow SIDS through AOSIS. We will also be revitalizing our links with Central America through the Central American Integration System, of which Belize is also a member.”

Briceno said that within CARICOM, the situation in Haiti commands the Community’s attention.

“The precarious political, social, economic and security situations present a formidable challenge. We will continue to reach out to all the stakeholders, as we seek to support all Haitians in arriving at a Haitian-led solution. This is the only way forward for peace and stability.”

“As we enter this New Year, challenges abound both within and outside the Community. But I am confident that with our collective ingenuity, the dynamism and promise of our integration, and our enduring Caribbean resilience, our Caribbean civilization will prevail,” Prime Minister Briceno added.
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