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Grenada PM: Region not immune to political instability

Published:Thursday | October 20, 2022 | 12:09 AM
Grenada Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell addressing OECS leaders in Montserrat yesterday.
Grenada Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell addressing OECS leaders in Montserrat yesterday.

BRADES (CMC):

Grenada’s Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell yesterday marked the 39th anniversary of the demise of the left-wing People’s Revolutionary Government in his homeland, with a warning that the region is not immune from political instability.

On October 19, 1983, then prime minister Maurice Bishop and several members of his cabinet were executed during a palace coup orchestrated by his deputy, Bernard Coard, three days earlier.

The demise of the left-wing government that itself had come to power on March 13, 1979 after removing the Eric Gairy administration, led to the United States launching an invasion of the Caribbean island to restore democratic rule.

Addressing the 72nd meeting of the leaders of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), Mitchell, who came to office in the June 23 general election this year, said the assassination of Bishop and senior members of his cabinet, 39 years ago, is still an issue for Caribbean people.

“While Grenada and the OECS have made significant progress, there are still countries in the region which have had to face the horrific fact of another head of state being assassinated, and as we are all aware not too long ago, the President of Haiti (Jovenel Moise) was assassinated, and our colleagues in Haiti are still reeling from the assassination”.

He said the anniversary in Grenada is a “sobering reminder and perhaps fitting that we should bring it up today that we too in the region are not immune from political instability and that we should not take our institutions and our democracies for granted.

“I wish to pledge to my colleague heads that Grenada firmly remains committed to the ideals of democracy and to further integration and union in the OECS movement,” Mitchell said.

His St Kitts-Nevis counterpart, Dr Terrence Drew, also commented on the situations in Grenada and Haiti, saying his twin-island federation continues “to hurt with you.

“We also continue to be hopeful because we are all a resilient people and you have our support”.

Haiti’s Prime Minister Dr Ariel Henry has also been urging the regional integration movement, of which the OECS states are members, to express solidarity and request assistance to alleviate what has been termed “the deepening humanitarian, security, political, and economic crises in Haiti”.

A statement issued by the Guyana-based CARICOM Secretariat said Henry had written to the leaders of the 15-member grouping on the issue facing the French-speaking country where criminal gangs have virtually brought the country to a standstill by blocking roads to fuel depots and launching rival gang war.

In addition, opposition politicians have been staging demonstrations calling for the removal of Henry, who came to power following the assassination in July last year of Moise. The opposition are demanding fresh presidential and other legislative elections.