| (CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen,
Greater Georgetown, Guyana) CARICOM Caucus of
Ambassadors is spearheading a major advocacy and
promotion Initiative in a number of US cities in
advance of the Conference on the Caribbean, 2007.
A ‘Diaspora Dialogue,’ in the form of Town Hall
Meetings has been organised in Washington, New York,
Hartford, Philadelphia and Miami primarily to engage
the Diaspora in planning the conference and in
shaping its outcome.
These meetings also provide an opportunity for
the Diaspora to be briefed “on developments in
CARICOM and the opportunities opened through the
creation of the Single Market, and new prospects in
the process of creating the Single Economy,” notes
an official report from the Caucus.
Commenting on their importance, The Caucus of
Ambassadors says “it is essential that the
development of the programme for the Diaspora Forum
be an organic process, hence the many months of
consultations.”
Reports from Washington indicate that the
meetings to date have been productive and
encouraging, and forecast positive outcomes for the
Diaspora Forum.
“The responses have been very positive and the
Diaspora is of the view that this collective
approach is long overdue,” states the report from
the Caucus.
Meetings in Houston on April 27; Atlanta, April
28 will be followed this week by one in Los Angeles
on May 4, 2007.
The Conference will facilitate also
Government-to-Government dialogue, an Experts’
Forum of international and regional experts to
deliberate on trade and development issues, and a
Private Sector Forum, which will ultimately
facilitate exchange of information on investment
opportunities in the Caribbean and the US.
The Conference on the Caribbean 2007 takes place
against the backdrop of the introduction of the
CARICOM Single Market in 2006 and the positive
efforts towards the creation of the framework of the
Single Economy by 2008.
It is organised chiefly to strengthen relations
between the US and CARICOM by addressing critical
issues relating to CARICOM’s future growth and
development in priority areas such as
competitiveness, trade and investment.
Contact;
piu@caricom.org
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