Belize Participates in CARICOM Summit as Regional Leaders Tackle Key Issues

From July 5 to 8, 2026, the 51st Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) convened in St. Lucia, bringing together regional leaders to tackle a wide slate of urgent shared challenges. Belize, a core CARICOM member, took part in the high-level gathering, with Prime Minister John Briceño represented by Attorney General Anthony Sylvestre, who headed the country’s official delegation.

The summit’s agenda centered on four priority topics: advancing regional integration, addressing the accelerating climate crisis, strengthening cross-border security, and mitigating the burdens of a soaring regional cost of living. Beyond these lead issues, heads of government deliberated on a broad spectrum of other pressing concerns, including full implementation of the CARICOM Single Market and Economy, unlocking accessible climate finance for vulnerable small island states, shoring up regional food and nutrition security, advancing global calls for reparations for historical slavery, boosting public health emergency preparedness, improving regional governance frameworks, resolving outstanding border disputes, and assessing recent political and social developments in Haiti and Cuba.

In a landmark decision announced during the summit, regional leaders formally approved the application of French Guiana to become CARICOM’s eighth Associate Member, marking a significant expansion of the bloc’s regional footprint.

A closed-door Heads of Government Retreat held on the summit’s sidelines allowed leaders to dive deeper into targeted strategies to curb violent crime, reinforce regional security infrastructure, and roll out coordinated policy responses to ease the cost of living squeeze on Caribbean households. The retreat also addressed institutional matters related to the reappointment of the CARICOM Secretary-General. After deliberation, leaders reached a consensus to request an advisory opinion from the Caribbean Court of Justice to clarify outstanding legal questions tied to the reappointment process.

For Belize’s delegation, the summit served as a critical platform to advocate for deeper cross-regional integration, enhanced investment in climate resilience across the Caribbean, and unified, coordinated policy action to address the unique systemic challenges facing Small Island Developing States on the global stage. Sylvestre used the gathering to update fellow regional leaders on recent developments in Belize-Guatemala relations and other key domestic priorities for the country.

Outside of formal plenary sessions, Belize held a series of productive bilateral meetings with delegations from Saint Lucia, Cuba, the Republic of Korea, and Australia. These side talks covered a range of mutual priorities, including collaborative climate action, innovative sargassum management strategies, expanded bilateral trade, targeted technical cooperation, preparations for the upcoming COP31 climate conference, and enhanced joint collaboration in multilateral international forums.