• Contact Us
  • Advertise with us!
  • Classifieds
Saturday, April 11, 2026
No Result
View All Result
Demerara Waves Online News- Guyana
  • Home
  • News
    • Premium News
    • Politics
    • Courts
    • Crime
  • Oil & Gas
  • Business
  • Agriculture
  • Health
  • Education
  • Sport
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Contribute Securely
  • Home
  • News
    • Premium News
    • Politics
    • Courts
    • Crime
  • Oil & Gas
  • Business
  • Agriculture
  • Health
  • Education
  • Sport
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Contribute Securely
No Result
View All Result
Demerara Waves
No Result
View All Result
Home Caribbean

Former CARICOM official weighs in on SG re-appointment

Denis Chabrol by Denis Chabrol
Sunday, 29 March 2026, 17:28
in Caribbean, Diplomacy, News, Politics
0 0
0
Former CARICOM official weighs in on SG re-appointment

Last Updated on Sunday, 29 March 2026, 20:28 by Denis Chabrol

Mr Joseph Cox

KINGSTON, Jamaica, Mar 29, CMC – A former assistant secretary general (ASG) of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Joseph Cox is raising questions regarding the re-appointment of Dr. Carla Barnett as the Secretary General of the 15-member regional integration grouping.

READ ALSO

T&T, Guyana agree to establish working group on investment

Woman to be charged with murder of 7-year old daughter

“Can Dr. Cala Barnett effectively serve another five-year term in the face of open objection, procedural concerns, and underlying divergence among member states, because in CARICOM, and indeed in small-state regionalism more broadly, authority is not imposed,” said Cox, who resigned as the ASG for Economic Integration, Innovation and Development in August 2024.

“It is conferred through consensus, reinforced through process, and sustained through trust. Remove those pillars, and the position may remain legally intact. But operationally, it becomes far more difficult to hold.

Support Independent & Accurate Journalism

Our readers support us

plan_select
“And that is the real issue now confronting the community. These are not procedural questions. They are questions of institutional direction and institutional credibility,” Cox said in his weekly Caribbean Business Review (CBR) podcast on Sunday.

Last week, in a brief statement, the CARICOM chairman and St. Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister Dr. Terrance Drew said that Barnett had attained the “required majority” from among regional leaders regarding her re-appointment at last month’s CARICOM summit held in Basseterre.

But Trinidad and Tobago has insisted that it was “not invited” to the deliberations that led Barnett’s re-appointment, with Port of Spain adding that Antigua and Barbuda and The Bahamas were also absent.

“I emphatically put on the record…that Trinidad and Tobago was not invited by email, telephone or in person to that meeting where that particular decision was made,” CARICOM and Foreign Affairs Minister Sean Sobers told the Trinidad and Tobago Parliament last Friday.

Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, who left the Basseterre summit prior to the retreat of regional leaders in Nevis, has since threatened to withdraw funding for CARICOM.

Cox, who served as the Guyana-based CARICOM Secretariat for nine years, said on the surface, the re-appointment of Barnett appears to have been “a routine decision, one that ensures continuity at the administrative level of the community.

“But the reality is far more complex. Trinidad and Tobago has formally objected to the re-appointment, not on the basis of personality, but on the basis of process, arguing that it was excluded from deliberations and that the matter was neither placed on the formal agenda nor recorded in the official communiqué. ”

Cox said the statement by Port of Spain that along with The Bahamas and Antigua and Barbuda, they were also not allowed to participate in the retreat where these discussions reportedly took place, effectively left “multiple member states outside of a decision of significant institutional importance.

“Further, additional information coming to hand also indicates that Haiti and Montserrat were also not represented at the leaders’ retreat at the highest level, and that matters because this is not just about participation, it’s about proportionality and influence.”

Trinidad and Tobago accounts for approximately 22 per cent of CARICOM’s budget, with the Bahamas and Haiti also meaningful contributors. “When countries of that scale are excluded, the issue immediately shifts from administration to institutional legitimacy.”

But Cox said that there is also a second layer to this noting that Dr. Drew has “framed the decision as having secured the “required majority”.

“Now, that language may satisfy a technical threshold, but it departs from a longstanding tradition within regional institutions where senior appointments are typically resolved through consensus, not arithmetic.”

The Jamaican-born economist said consensus is not ceremonial and that “it is what binds small states into a functioning community.

“And that’s particularly relevant here, because it’s also understood within regional policy circles that a question of Dr. Barnett’s re-appointment was not without sensitivity,” he said, noting that “there had been varying levels of comfort across member states regarding the performance and direction of the secretariat, meaning that any decision on a second term was always likely to require careful consultation and broad alignment”.

Cox said that makes the process even more important, not less.

He said juxtaposed against Prime Minister Persaud-Bissessar’s “biting criticism of the CARICOM secretariat and its management at the official opening of the very meeting where the reappointment was made a mere two days later is even more poignant.

“And then there’s a procedural question. If this decision was taken at a heads-up government meeting in St. Kitts and Nevis, was there no reference to it in the official communique? Was it formally tabled? And if discussed in retreat, why was it not subsequently recorded in plenary as required for institutional validity?”

Cox said that there is also a further question in that “if this decision was taken on February 26, why was it only publicly communicated on March 25, nearly one month later?”

He said this raises a further procedural question.

“Article 24 of the revised Treaty of Chaguaramas provides that the Secretary-General is appointed by the Conference on the recommendation of the Community Council and re-appointment may be made by the Conference.

“But the Treaty is silent on the procedure for re-appointment and does not explicitly prescribe a voting method. That makes the sequence of process critical. Was there a recommendation of the Community Council in this case? And if so, how was it arrived at?

“Because if there was, how were key member states unaware? If not, the issue becomes one of compliance. And this brings the issue into sharper focus under Article 28 of the revised Treaty of Chaguaramas. The Treaty provides that decisions of the Conference are to be taken by an affirmative vote of all members with provision for validity where three-quarters support a decision in the case of abstentions.”

But Cox said the framework presumes participation, noting “it presumes that member states are present, aware, and able to take a position whether in support or in abstention.

“Where that condition is in question, the issue is no longer simply voting, is whether the process leading to the vote was complete. At that point, the issue is no longer disagreement. It becomes contestability.”

He said while the treaty provides for re-appointment by the Conference, the absence of clear recommendation, full participation, and formal recording raises a deeper question, not just of process, but of whether the decision meets the full threshold of institutional validity.

“More broadly, it raises the question of whether CARICOM is drifting from a consensus-based community towards a more fragmented, interest-driven structure,” he added.

Last Friday, Barnett deflected mounting concerns about her appointment for a second term, referring questions regarding her re-appointment to the CARICOM chairman.

“No, no, Sir. You don’t need to ask me, you need to ask the Chairman. I don’t participate in those discussions. Those discussions are held among the leaders,” she told the Guyana-based Demerara Waves Online News that asked her for a reaction to concerns that were being raised about her re-appointment.

“I don’t have any concerns,” said Barnett, an economist, who became the eighth CARICOM Secretary General on August 15, 2021, by “unanimous appointment” of the regional leaders.

She remained silent when asked if she believes she should step down.

Share this:

  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Discover more from Demerara Waves Online News- Guyana

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Tags: Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Secretary General Dr Carla Barnettconsensusfive-year termFormer CARICOM Assistant Secretary General Joseph Coxobjectionsre-appointmentretreat

Related Posts

T&T, Guyana agree to establish working group on investment
Business

T&T, Guyana agree to establish working group on investment

Friday, 10 April 2026, 19:00
Two arrested for stabbing death of elderly man
Crime

Woman to be charged with murder of 7-year old daughter

Friday, 10 April 2026, 18:07
DPP now at centre of ‘tit-for-tat’ over criminal charges by govt, opposition
Courts

DPP denies Opposition Leader’s claim of political interference in narco-trafficking case against PPP councillor

Friday, 10 April 2026, 17:19
Next Post
OPINION: Charles Ramson, Jr. for president, not just yet

OPINION: PPP addiction: control, more control, total control

Recent News

T&T, Guyana agree to establish working group on investment

T&T, Guyana agree to establish working group on investment

Friday, 10 April 2026, 19:00
Two arrested for stabbing death of elderly man

Woman to be charged with murder of 7-year old daughter

Friday, 10 April 2026, 18:07
DPP now at centre of ‘tit-for-tat’ over criminal charges by govt, opposition

DPP denies Opposition Leader’s claim of political interference in narco-trafficking case against PPP councillor

Friday, 10 April 2026, 17:19
Town Clerk refutes City Mayor’s claim that subvention was not provided

Town Clerk, PPP councillor distance themselves from lawsuit over constabulary building

Friday, 10 April 2026, 15:01
Air Services Limited plane crashes in rough terrain

Air Services Limited plane crashes in rough terrain

Friday, 10 April 2026, 13:57

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 156.3K other subscribers

Demerara Waves Media Inc. is a Guyana-based digital news media company committed to delivering timely, credible, and relevant news coverage. We report on key national issues, including politics, business, crime, education, health, sports, and culture, serving readers in Guyana and abroad.

Other News and Opinion Wesbsites

  • Caribbean Political Economy
  • The View From Europe
  • Pan Caribbean Voices
  • Huffington Post
  • Caribbean Life
  • New York Daily News
  • New York Post
  • Share News
  • Caricom Headquarters
  • Association of Caribbean States
  • Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States

Recommended News Links

  • Insight Guyana
  • BBC Latin America
  • Prensa Latina
  • Mercopress
  • Inter Press Service
  • Caribbean Media Corporation
  • Al Jazeera
  • Voice of America
  • Business News Americas
  • All Africa
  • Catholic News Agency
  • Xinhaunet China News Agency

Recommended Radio Links

  • Voice of Barbados
  • Caribbean Harmony (St.Lucia)
  • Love FM (Belize)
  • VON Radio (Nevis)
  • WWRL 1600 AM (New York)
  • WAVS 1170 AM (Florida)
  • G98.7 (Toronto)
  • WeeRadio 87.7 (New York)
  • Voice of St. Maarten
  • Power 102 FM (Trinidad)
  • i95.5 FM (Trinidad)
  • ZNS Bahamas

Demerara Waves Media Inc. © 2026 | A GxMedia Website Solution.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Advertising Rates
  • Checkout
  • Classifieds
  • Contact Us
  • Contribute Securely With Stripe Payment System
    • Membership Billing
    • Membership Cancel
    • Membership Orders
    • Your Profile
  • Home
  • Log In
  • Log In
  • Member Directory
  • Membership Checkout
    • Membership Confirmation
  • Membership Levels
  • My Account
  • My Profile
  • Order Confirmation
  • Order Failed
  • Payment Confirmation
  • Payment Failed
  • Reset Password
  • Sign Up

Demerara Waves Media Inc. © 2026 | A GxMedia Website Solution.