Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Politics

Trudeau heads south to discuss aid for Haiti at CARICOM conference

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau leaves Wednesday for the Bahamas to attend the CARICOM heads of government meeting.

Haiti will top the agenda - but member nations have other problems to discuss

Justin Trudeau, wearing a jacket and tie, waves in front of an airplane with Canada's coat of arms on it.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau departs for Nassau, Bahamas, from Ottawa on Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2023. Trudeau will be attending the Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau leaves Wednesday for the Bahamas to attend the CARICOM heads of government meeting.

Trudeau has less than two days with leaders of the Caribbean economic and political bloc. While thePM will be preoccupied by the worsening situation in Haiti, the leaders of small island nations will be bringing other concerns to the table.

Climate change, migrationand food insecurity are also expected tofeature prominently in thediscussions. Bahamian Prime MinisterPhilip Davis tolda news conference before the summit that Haiti will still be a "priority" during the three-day meeting.

Trudeau's arrival Wednesday afternoon comes as CARICOM marks its 50th anniversary. It also signals Canada's return to the Caribbean's political stage. The last Canadian prime minister to attend a CARICOM meeting in the Caribbean was Stephen Harper in 2007.

Trudeau's return to CARICOM was supposed to happen in 2020, but domestic issues derailed his attendance.

In a statement announcing the trip, Trudeau's office said he hopes to find a "Haitian-led" solution to an"egregious" security crisis fuelled by gang warfare that is"having a devastating impact on the Haitian people."

A parent tries to hand off his daughter to get her through the gate of Haitis immigration office as they wait their turn to apply for a passport, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023. A rush for passports at Haitis main immigration office has been unleashed After U.S. President Joe Biden announced last month that the U.S. will accept 30,000 people a month from Haiti, Nicaragua, Cuba and Venezuela if they pass a background check and have an eligible sponsor and a passport to travel.
A parent tries to hand off his daughter to get her through the gate of Haiti's immigration office as they wait their turn to apply for a passport in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on Feb. 9, 2023. (Odelyn Joseph/The Associated Press)

Jean Augustine, a former Liberal cabinet minister and long-time advocate for the Caribbean diaspora, said Canada has a "moral impetus" to help Haiti.

"We see how we've come together around Ukraine," Augustine told CBC. "This is the right time as the prime minister goes down there to make sure that the conversations occur, and that the other leaders are on board with strategies that can help."

The Canadian government saiditprovided over $90 million in humanitarian and development assistance to Haiti over fiscal year 2022-23. It has supported the Haitian National Police by deploying a long-range patrol aircraft and coordinatingthe delivery of security equipment.



Cost of living pressures

Haiti shouldn't be the onlytopic on the agenda when Trudeau meets with Caribbean leaders, said aninternational relations professor at the University of Alberta.

"Haiti is a very important problem to be addressed, (but) there are other issues as well," said Andy Knight, who also serves as the university's inaugural provost fellow in Black excellence and leadership.

He said some Caribbean economies many of them solely dependent on tourism are struggling to bounce back fromCOVID lockdowns.

They're also contending with the fallout from high food, oiland gas prices. Inflation in six CARICOM countries peaked at eightper cent in 2022 and some islands saw food prices increase from six to 11 per cent. In Canada, inflation averaged6.8 per cent last year.

Some of these trends have been driven by the war in Ukraine whose president VolodymyrZelenskyywill be addressing CARICOM virtually.

Trudeau's office did say he hopes to advance economic growth in the regionduring his trip.

Some CARICOMnations are tryingto produce more of their ownfood to reduceimports.

But for some Caribbean leaders, the key to economic growth lies in tacklinggrowing national debt burdenswhich"simply skyrocketed" after the pandemic, Knight said.

According to areport by the Inter-American Development Bank, "public debt in the region (the Caribbean and Latin America) grew from 58 per cent[of GDP] in 2019 to 72 per centin 2020 due to COVID-related fiscal packages, lower revenues, and a recession." The report was based on calculations from the International Monetary Fund.

Canada's debt-to-GDP ratio stood at 31.6 per cent in 2021.

One of the loudest voices calling for debt reliefisPrime Minister of Barbados Mia Mottley.At the United Nations in September, Mottley said small, developing island nations experiencing crises like the pandemic and natural disasters driven by climate change should be permitted to waive repayment of debt.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sits with Prime Minister of Barbados, Mia Mottley.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau takes part in a bilateral meeting with Prime Minister of Barbados Mia Mottley during the Summit of the Americas in Los Angeles on Wednesday, June 8, 2022. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

She's also among the CARICOM leaders calling for a"loss and damage fund" to compensate countries that sustain considerable damage from climate-fuelled weather events.

Caribbean leaders are also calling on wealthy countries to provide themwith their shareof $100 billion US in climate financingannually.

"The reality is the larger emitters in the world need to take charge and do what is right," said CARICOM's secretary general Carla Barnetton Tuesday. "Those who are causing the impact are not bearing their burden of dealing with the effects of that."

In a statement, the Prime Minister's Office says Trudeau's trip will be about advocating "for climate action and resilience for the region, which is particularly vulnerable to climate change and natural disasters."

Global Affairs Canada added in a statement that, as part of its $5.3 billion commitment to international climate finance, Canada has given $14.5 million to CARICOM countries other thanHaitito address mitigation and adaptation.