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  • 9 hours ago
A former senior CARICOM official is backing Prime Minister Kamla Persad Bissessar's call for the Caribbean Court of Justice to determine the legality of the reappointment of CARICOM Secretary General Dr. Carla Barnett.

Tv6's Nicole M Romany has the story.
Transcript
00:00Former Assistant Secretary General for Trade and Economic Integration at the CARICOM Secretariat
00:06Joseph Cox says it is unfortunate.
00:09The issue has taken this long to resolve.
00:12Prime Minister Kamala Passat-Bissessa has consistently maintained that the reappointment
00:17process of the Secretary General was unconstitutional, while several CARICOM leaders have supported
00:23the decision.
00:24Cox believes the matter should have been referred to the CCJ from the beginning.
00:29Two, to me, this is unfortunate that it has taken this long for that issue to be resolved.
00:36Because truthfully, most of us who had been looking at the issue from it became public would
00:45have said that given the issue that this is not an issue of contestability of an appointment
00:52or reappointment there too, that the CCJ would have been an obvious arbiter in this type
01:00of exercise.
01:01Cox tells the Morning Edition confidence is essential for anyone serving as CARICOM Secretary General,
01:08adding that if even one member state has serious objections, the matter should be addressed.
01:13He notes that the treaty provides a mechanism to resolve disputes of this nature.
01:19The treaty, as it is constructed, treated this issue in a very, as far as I'm concerned,
01:27very clear-cut manner, and for practical reasons, whereby when you have appointments of this nature,
01:35it has to be done by consensus. Everybody has to agree. And one negative vote accounts to effectively
01:45a veto. And no matter how you try and nuance it, the reality of life is that is what it
01:51comes
01:51down to.
01:52Cox also believes CARICOM must become more transparent. He says the regional body has operated with too
01:59much caution and maintains that the issue should be placed before the court and resolved through
02:05the legal process.
02:06As far as I'm concerned, put it to the court.
02:09Okay.
02:09Put it to the court, let the court rule on it, and then let the chips fall where they may.
02:15If the court says that, listen, they all have been, you know, ridiculous over this thing,
02:20and let the reappointment stand, then so be it.
02:25Nicole M. Romany, TV6 News.
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