While the government has yet to announce who will lead Trinidad and Tobago’s delegation to next month’s 50th Regular Meeting of Caricom heads in St Kitts and Nevis, former foreign affairs minister Dr. Amery Browne believes Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar is likely to attend.
Speaking outside Parliament on Friday, Browne again accused Persad-Bissessar of breaking with decades of regionalist tradition, claiming Trinidad and Tobago is being deliberately distanced from Caricom at a critical moment for the region.
“The prime minister’s posture marks an unprecedented shift in the country’s foreign policy,” Browne told Guardian Media. He noted that previous leaders consistently prioritised regional integration.
“This is the first prime minister of this country who has sought to isolate Trinidad and Tobago from Caricom and to attack Caricom as an institution the way this prime minister is doing. Even in her former tenure, she conducted herself as a regionalist. Something dramatic has happened—she has departed from all precedent. ANR Robinson, Basdeo Panday, and all PNM prime ministers were regionalists.”
Browne also highlighted Persad-Bissessar’s absence from recent Caricom heads of government meetings and what he described as limited engagement with regional counterparts. While he stopped short of predicting whether she will attend the upcoming summit, he suggested recent developments could prompt a change in course.
“We’ve expressed—I’ve expressed, and the leader of the opposition has clearly expressed—our disappointment that the Prime Minister has not attended past heads of government conferences, has not attended any in-person meetings of Caricom, and has not engaged properly with fellow Caricom heads. Will she attend on this occasion? That’s up to her. Given some recent changes, maybe she’ll make the journey this time. Let’s see.”
Caricom’s 50th regular meeting will take place in Basseterre, St Kitts and Nevis, from February 24 to 27 and will focus on regional unity amid geopolitical tensions, migration pressures, and security concerns.
Since winning the April 28 general election, Persad-Bissessar has not attended any in-person Caricom meetings.
At a United National Congress media briefing last week, Foreign Affairs Minister Sean Sobers said unresolved preparations for the summit have delayed Trinidad and Tobago’s decision on its delegation.
“There are several matters engaging Caricom’s attention concerning or tethered to the Caricom Heads of Government meeting carded for the end of February in St Kitts and Nevis that have not been settled yet. Based on that, Cabinet cannot take a decision on the delegation that will be attending until those matters are resolved,” Sobers said, adding he hopes the issues will be settled by the end of the week.
