Prime Minister, Patrick Manning
Port of Spain: Affirming their “renewed
spirit of cooperation, integration and
solidarity,” the hemisphere’s leaders concluded
the Fifth Summit of the Americas with a
consensus to advance joint solutions to address
the most pressing challenges facing the region.
With a focus on the theme of the weekend’s
Summit—“Securing Our Citizens’ Future by
Promoting Human Prosperity, Energy Security and
Environmental Sustainability”—the Declaration of
Commitment of Port of Spain outlines key areas
in which the countries will work toward common
goals.
The 97-paragraph document, which was negotiated
by the countries over the past seven months and
adopted today by consensus, places an emphasis
on fighting poverty and promoting development
and social justice, and states that “deep
inequalities continue to exist in our countries
and in our region.”
Prime Minister Patrick Manning of Trinidad and
Tobago, who chaired the Fifth Summit of the
Americas, signed the Declaration of Commitment
on behalf of the region, following a retreat by
the Heads of State and Government held at the
Diplomatic Centre in Port of Spain.
The Prime Minister acknowledged that the
document had not found unanimous support—when 34
countries are negotiating, he noted, “no one
country is likely to get everything that country
requires”—but said the leaders agreed to adopt
it by consensus.
In his remarks at the signing, Prime Minister
Manning said he was “extremely pleased” at the
outcome of the Fifth Summit, adding that the
meeting “has turned out to be a signal example
of cooperation and collaboration between the
countries of the Western Hemisphere.”
The opening sections of the Declaration of
Commitment of Port of Spain focus on the three
pillars of the theme—human prosperity, energy
security and environmental sustainability—while
later sections address ways to strengthen public
security, democratic governance and the Summit
of the Americas process itself.
The Declaration of Commitment recognises that
meeting long-term goals will require tackling
short-term economic challenges. “We are
committed to addressing the current economic and
financial crisis in order to achieve our
objectives of promoting human prosperity and
securing our citizens’ future,” the document
states. “We are determined to enhance our
cooperation and work together to restore global
growth and achieve needed reforms in the world’s
financial systems.”
The longest section of the document, on human
prosperity, lays out measures to improve the
efficiency and effectiveness of anti-poverty
efforts, promote job creation and prevent
exploitation of workers. It also calls for
action to strengthen food security, promote good
nutrition and broaden access to health care,
particularly for the most vulnerable.
Health-related commitments include measures to
reduce neonatal mortality, combat both
communicable and non-communicable diseases and
continue efforts against HIV/AIDS. “We commit to
strengthening public policies aimed at reducing
the incidence of mother-to-child transmission of
HIV to less than 5% by 2015,” the document
states.
It also lays out a series of education-related
commitments, among them achieving universal
primary education by 2015, a secondary education
enrolment rate of 75% by 2010 and a minimum 40%
participation in tertiary education by 2020.
The section on energy security looks at aspects
such as energy efficiency and conservation and
calls for the development of renewable energy
sources and technologies. It notes that energy
“is an essential resource for improving the
standard of living of our peoples and that
access to energy is of paramount importance to
economic growth with equity and social
inclusion.”
Environmental sustainability, the third pillar
of the Fifth Summit theme, is another area in
which the region’s leaders called for
cooperation. The Declaration of Commitment
recognises “the adverse impacts of climate
change on all countries of the Hemisphere, in
particular, Small Island Developing States,
countries with low-lying coastal, arid and
semi-arid areas or areas liable to floods,
drought and desertification, developing
countries with fragile mountainous ecosystems
and land-locked countries.”
The full text of the Declaration of Commitment
of Port of Spain is available on the Fifth
Summit of the Americas Web site:
www.fifthsummitoftheamericas.org