Caribbean leaders gather for key summit to feature Rubio as US policy impacts region
GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Caribbean leaders prepared to meet Tuesday in St. Kitts and Nevis to debate pressing issues including the region’s relationship with the U.S. government, which has continued to strike suspected drug boats in the area, killing local fishermen.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is expected to meet with Caribbean leaders on Wednesday as part of the four-day regional summit on the twin-island nation, one of the few countries in the world to have formal diplomatic relations with Taiwan.
The meeting comes as CARICOM, a 15-member regional trade bloc, complains about tough U.S. policy decisions imposed on the region in the past year. They include that nations accept third-country deportees, reject Cuban medical missions, chill relations with China and consider allowing U.S. military hardware in the Caribbean. CARICOM also has complained about the suspension of U.S. immigrant visa processing for Dominica and Antigua and Barbuda, and about pressure to cut back on passport and citizenship by investment programs.
‘It is about mutual respect’
Bahamian Foreign Minister Fred Mitchell told The Associated Press on Tuesday ahead of the summit that he doesn’t know if those individual topics will come up with Rubio, but said he expects a full discussion on the nature of the relationship with the power to the north.
“It is about mutual respect and a rules-based order,” he said. “Those are some of the things we would expect from the meeting, and we are also available for any private dialogue with Mr. Rubio.”
Mark Kirton, a retired international relations professor formerly with the University of the West Indies, said the summit is “crucial for Caribbean unity … to let Mr. Rubio know that we are speaking with one voice.”
At a recent meeting of eastern Caribbean nations, Godwin Friday, prime minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, said the region needs to stick to coordinated responses on key issues like security and deportees from the U.S. headed to the Caribbean.
“We have been approached with respect to that. We have been presented with a memorandum of understanding for us to review,” he recently told local, state-owned NBC Radio. “Caricom and the Organization of Eastern Caribbean states were put together for a purpose, and we must use that in a way for us to seek to have common approaches.”
The U.S. State Department has not said which officials Rubio would meet with on Wednesday, but noted he intends to discuss ways to promote regional security and stability, trade and economic growth in group and bilateral meetings.
Caribbean leaders also are expected to talk about other issues including security, reparations, climate change and financing, and a single market economy.
US policy in the Caribbean
Rubio’s scheduled visit comes more than a month after the U.S. attacked Venezuela and arrested its leader, Nicolás Maduro, who pleaded not guilty to charges of working with drug cartels to facilitate the shipment of thousands of tons of cocaine into the U.S.
The U.S. also has killed at least 151 people in strikes that began in early September and target suspected “narco-terrorists” in small boats. Many of the victims are from the Caribbean.
The latest strike took place on Monday, with three people killed in the Caribbean Sea.
The U.S. has not provided evidence that the targeted boats are ferrying drugs, and families of those killed in the Caribbean have decried the attacks.
The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump also has tightened an embargo on Cuba, which has implemented fuel-saving measures after oil shipments from Venezuela and Mexico were halted.
On Monday, Cuba’s U.N. Resident Coordinator Francisco Pichón told AP that the U.S. oil embargo is preventing aid from reaching those still struggling to recover from Hurricane Melissa, which struck eastern Cuba in late October as a Category 3 storm.
He noted that the energy blockade and fuel shortages “affect the entire logistics chain involved in being able to work in Cuba at this time, anywhere in the country.”
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