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mail@acs-aec.org
ACS
with new vigour
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Election process was carried out by consensus and thus
election proceeded expeditiously and in accordance with
standard rules.
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Dynamic of rotation is quite healthy for institution.
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With new secretary general will come new perspectives
for ACS.
THE
13th meeting of the Ministerial Council of the ACS was held
on January 25, when, in addition to other important matters,
the diplomat Luis Fernando Andrade Falla was selected as
the new secretary general.
The election process was carried out by consensus and thus
the election proceeded expeditiously and in accordance with
the standard rules of the entity.
According to the statutes of the ACS, a candidate from the
Central American grouping had to be chosen since, although
the Ministerial Council operates on a country basis, there
exists within the organisation the principle of rotation
for the high-level positions.
As a result, the first secretary general was put forward
by the Group of Three (Mexico, Venezuela and Colombia),
the second by the Caricom grouping, and the third by the
non-grouped countries (Cuba, Dominican Republic and Panama).
That dynamic of rotation is quite healthy for the institution
because given the size of the organisation, as well as the
fact that it is not a question of one group responding to
a single tradition of days gone by, it was a wise decision
for each of the groups identified to be afforded the opportunity
to represent the entity as a whole.
Furthermore, the ACS was created with the knowledge that
the organisation was bringing together two sub-regional
integration groups, each one with more than a half century
of independent work in their respective geographic space.
In other words, establishing the principles of alternation
and rotation from the onset was a prudent administrative
policy. With this election, the cycle of the four groups
existing within the ACS is complete.
The election of the fourth secretary general of the ACS
is a contribution to institutional strengthening and recognition
by countries of the interest in moving forward with the
regional project.
In that way, the new secretary general is receiving an organisation
in which the same Ministerial Council that chose him, proposed
to start brainstorming on modernising the administrative
and financial areas that would update its modus operandi,
so that it would be more consistent with the development
achieved thus far.
With the new secretary general would come new perspectives
for the institution, although its leadership is collective.
From the Ministerial Council as the highest political organ,
there is no doubt that the individual at the helm of the
secretariat will impress upon it, in one way or another,
a particular style in terms of management efforts.
However, what is most important is that the incoming secretary
general assumes his new duties with fervour, opening up
a space in which to relaunch ideas and proposals, as well
as encourage new initiatives.
We are certain that Andrade Falla will kick off a period
of renewal and change in the ACS, and one contributing factor
to this will undoubtedly be the fact that he is a candidate
hailing from Central America, especially after the signing
of the historic agreement between Caricom and Sica.
Certainly the rapprochement efforts between those two sub-regions
will advance and co-operation efforts will deepen between
both groups, and this is significant since it involves not
only the two largest groups, but also it is within them
that integration processes are underway.
n Dr Rubén Silié Valdez is the secretary
general of the Association of Caribbean
States. The views expressed are not
necessarily the official views of the ACS.
Feedback can be sent to a: mail@acs-aec.org
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