Caribbean ministers of labour join Dr. Mohamed Irfaan Ali, President of Guyana (front row, centre right), and other dignitaries for the 12th ILO Caribbean Labour Ministers’ Meeting in Georgetown, Guyana. Photo credit: ILO/Azikiwe Denheart.
GEORGETOWN, Guyana--The twelfth International Labour Organization (ILO) Caribbean Labour Ministers’ Meeting has concluded with a regional commitment to focus on social justice through policies and practices that address disruptions to labour markets and inequalities worsened by the impacts of multiple crises, ranging from COVID-19 to the Russian aggression in Ukraine, and climate change, according to a press release from the ILO.
The three-day meeting, held in Guyana between May 23 and 25, culminated with the affirmation of three social justice priorities: labour migration and mobility, the just transition to sustainable and resilient Caribbean societies and economies, and fundamental principles and rights at work related to health and safety, the release states. The ministers also reaffirmed their commitment to tripartite cooperation and social dialogue as necessary for the realisation of social justice across the Caribbean and the world.
At the Opening Ceremony, Dr. Mohamed Irfaan Ali, President of Guyana, called on the ministers to “craft regional solutions for regional problems”. The delegations comprised ministers and senior officials from 13 member States and nine non-metropolitan territories, representatives of the Caribbean Congress of Labour (CCL) and Caribbean employers, represented by the Jamaica Employers’ Federation (JEF) and the Employers’ Consultative Association of Trinidad and Tobago (ECATT), as well as the Caribbean Community CARICOM Secretariat.
“Drawing on the ILO’s Constitution, which affirms that universal and lasting peace can only be realised if it is based on social justice, the ministers and other senior officials have made it clear that they intend to uphold social justice as the foundation of building a prosperous Caribbean, particularly as the region faces the impacts of the current global poly-crisis,” said Dennis Zulu, Director of the ILO Decent Work Team and Office for the Caribbean. “The ILO remains a steadfast partner to work with regional policymakers and social partners to find solutions to these unprecedented challenges.”
The Caribbean Labour Ministers’ Meeting is a biennial forum organised by the ILO Decent Work Team and Office for the Caribbean for English- and Dutch-speaking Caribbean member States and non-metropolitan territories. The meeting facilitates the exchange of views and ideas on issues relevant to the labour portfolio, including the latest regional and international developments, as well as discussions on ILO’s programmes of benefit to the ministries and the region, the release states.
The articulated priorities for the Caribbean by the ministers and other senior officials will also be shared at the 111th annual International Labour Conference taking place in Geneva from June 5 to 16, it adds.
To download the conclusions of the 12th ILO Caribbean Labour Ministers’ Meeting in their entirety, visit the ILO Caribbean website, it concludes.