OAS Calls for Greater Cooperation Between Member States and Port Authorities
Caribbean Net News
June 17, 2010
WASHINGTON, USA -- The Assistant Secretary General of the Organization
of American States (OAS), Ambassador Albert Ramdin, called for closer
cooperation and collaboration among Member States and port authorities
to ensure greater efficiency in both the security and trade sectors
during the International Maritime Conference at OAS headquarters in
Washington, DC.
He reminded an international audience that the
OAS continues to strengthen cooperation and to develop regional
policies and strategies to address the range of security threats within
the maritime sector.
Speaking on behalf of the OAS, Ramdin stressed that the “security of
the peoples of the Americas is a key pillar of the OAS” and emphasized
the significance of the Organization’s multidimensional security
framework approved by all Member States.
“Within
multidimensional security, the relationship between security and
commerce where maritime port protection is the main component of the
supply chain security is of vital importance,” he added.
Ramdin
also stressed that security and efficiency go hand in hand and are
essential for ensuring competitiveness in maritime transport and trade.
He further maintained that “given that approximately 90% of
global commerce is transported by sea, the international community must
help ensure that all states, in particular the smaller states, have the
resources to address both maritime security needs and trade
effectiveness.”
Ramdin also said that “the OAS is the most
appropriate platform for continued policy dialogue on the region’s
security challenges and needs because early in the decade, the OAS
Committee on Hemispheric Security and more recently the Secretariat for
Multidimensional Security have been proactively assisting its Member
States in formulating and implementing region-wide policies and
strategies to enhance security in the Americas.”
He added that
“as a result, most OAS Member States have improved security of their
port facilities, assigned security officials, installed new equipment
with the latest technology and adopted new regulations to prioritize
maritime security.”
In closing, Ramdin reiterated the
commitment of the OAS to increase assistance to its Member States in
the area of security. “For the Organization, there is no doubt that
security, development and good governance are central to ensuring
prosperity, peace and progress among the peoples of the Americas.”
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