END OF YEAR MESSAGE: Outgoing Chair of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Dr the Most Honourable Andrew Holness, Prime Minister of Jamaica

In his concluding address as outgoing Chair of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Jamaican Prime Minister Dr. Andrew Holness delivered a comprehensive assessment of the regional body’s accomplishments and challenges throughout 2025. Speaking from the CARICOM Secretariat in Guyana on December 27, Holness emphasized the remarkable solidarity demonstrated during Hurricane Melissa’s devastating impact, which showcased the Caribbean family’s unwavering support system.

The political leader highlighted landmark achievements in regional integration, particularly the historic decision by Barbados, Belize, Dominica, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines to implement full free movement of citizens among themselves effective October 2025. This ‘concentric circles’ approach represents a pragmatic evolution of integration models, allowing progressive cooperation while maintaining accessibility for other member states.

Holness detailed CARICOM’s successful economic advocacy through coordinated efforts with the CARICOM Private Sector Organization and strategic international partners. These collaborations yielded expanded air connectivity, enhanced trade mechanisms, and strengthened food security initiatives across the region.

On the global stage, CARICOM maintained a unified diplomatic presence through high-level engagements at the UN General Assembly, G20 Summit, and CELAC-EU Summit. The outgoing Chair acknowledged progress at COP30 in Belém but emphasized that climate outcomes remained inadequate for vulnerable Small Island and Low-lying Coastal Developing States. He commended regional agencies including the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre and CDEMA for their critical work in climate resilience.

The address noted deepened Africa-CARICOM relations through the Second Africa-CARICOM Summit, establishing an ‘Atlantic Bridge’ for development cooperation. Holness also highlighted CARICOM’s sustained advocacy for Haiti, resulting in UN Security Council action against gang violence and optimistic preparations for 2026 elections.

Emphasizing CARICOM’s commitment to the Caribbean as a Zone of Peace, Holness articulated principles of sovereignty, international law, and peaceful dispute resolution while acknowledging member states’ occasional differing perspectives as natural within a community of sovereign nations.

As geopolitical tensions intensify globally, Holness called for strategic discipline and cohesion, affirming that CARICOM’s credibility rests on managing differences through diplomacy rather than division. The outgoing Chair expressed confidence in the community’s future as he prepares to hand leadership to St. Kitts and Nevis and Saint Lucia, concluding with wishes for a peaceful and prosperous 2026.