Analyst: Country risks regional ties

A prominent Caribbean political analyst has sharply criticized the Trinidad and Tobago government’s rationale for opposing the reappointment of CARICOM Secretary-General Dr. Carla Barnett, labeling its reasoning as fundamentally flawed and jurisdictionally misplaced.

Political scientist Peter Wickham asserted that the Trinidadian government’s justification falls entirely outside the mandate of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). His comments follow the announcement by CARICOM Chairman and St. Kitts and Nevis Prime Minister Dr. Terrance Drew that a majority of heads of government had endorsed Dr. Barnett’s reappointment during last month’s regional summit.

Trinidadian Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar publicly declared her opposition to the reappointment, stating that “CARICOM has been failing for 52 years and will continue to fail for the next 52 years,” while threatening to reduce her country’s financial contributions to the regional body.

Wickham challenged the Prime Minister’s diplomatic approach, noting that her absence from the critical meeting where the decision was made undermined her authority to subsequently object to the outcome. He further argued that her treatment of regional partners demonstrated a concerning lack of respect for established CARICOM protocols.

The analyst specifically dismissed the Prime Minister’s cited justification—related to the extradition of firearms dealer Brent Thomas from Barbados—as entirely irrelevant to CARICOM’s Secretary-General appointment process. Wickham emphasized that such national security matters fall outside CARICOM’s jurisdiction and should not influence personnel decisions within the regional organization.

Warning of potential economic repercussions, Wickham highlighted Trinidad and Tobago’s dual role as both the largest contributor to and beneficiary of CARICOM arrangements. He cautioned that deteriorating relations could prompt other Caribbean nations to reconsider preferential trade agreements with Trinidad, potentially shifting their economic partnerships toward Latin American suppliers.

International relations expert Dr. Anthony Gonzales noted significant unanswered questions regarding the circumstances under which Prime Minister Persad-Bissessar departed the regional meeting, suggesting the public has received only partial information about the diplomatic incident.