Primer ministro de San Vicente y las Granadinas propone un referendo para romper con la Corona británica

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Primer ministro de San Vicente y las Granadinas propone desligarse de la reina británica como jefa de Estado

El primer ministro de San Vicente y las Granadinas, Ralph Gonsalves, propuso al Parlamento un referéndum de un solo punto, el cual plantea sustituir a la reina Isabel II como jefa de Estado por un presidente no ejecutivo y autóctono.

Gonsalves detalló ante la Cámara que dicho paso se llevará a cabo solo si hay apoyo bipartidista, y se someterá a votación popular de los sanvicentinos.

“Estoy dispuesto, si la oposición está de acuerdo, a plantear antes de fin de año o a principios del próximo una cuestión en un referéndum: tener un presidente del país”, expresó el premier.

De igual manera ahondó que de contar con respaldo bipartidista para el referéndum, también se creará un comité para “para llevar a cabo un proceso de descolonización en los nombres.Cambiamos el nombre de Victoria Park. Cambiamos el nombre de Higginson Street y otros lugares”.

En tal sentido Gonsalves expresó en noviembre pasado su esperanza de que los países independientes de la Comunidad del Caribe (Caricom) experimentaran “la transición de un sistema monárquico a uno republicano”; cuestión promulgada en noviembre de 2021 por Barbados.

Ya en abril último, los sanvicentinos protestaron exigiendo compensaciones por la esclavitud durante una visita a esa nación caribeña de los condes de Wessex, Eduardo y Sofía.

Por su parte, el primer ministro de Antigua y Barbuda, Gaston Browne, igualmente manifestó en abril último, el deseo de dicha nación caribeña de convertirse en una república y desligarse así de la Corona británica.

San Vicente y las Granadinas es un país insular que se independizó del Reino Unido en 1979, pero que sigue vinculado con la Corona británica, ostentando la jefatura de Estado la reina Isabel II.

Con anterioridad, en 2009 celebraron un referéndum similar para proponer la sustitución de la reina como jefa de Estado, el cual fue rechazado por el 55 por ciento de los votantes.

TeleSur


St Vincent’s PM proposes vote on removing Queen as head of stat

Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves on Monday proposed a single-item referendum asking the people of St Vincent and the Grenadines to decide whether or not to replace Britain’s Queen Elizabeth with a non-executive, home-grown president as head of state.

But Gonsalves told Parliament that he would only pursue the referendum if there is bipartisan support.

“I will tell you this. I am prepared, if the opposition agrees today, before the end of the year or early next year to put one question in a referendum: to have a home-grown president in the manner in which I’ve just described, a non-executive president, and as was laid out in the proposed constitution, and let us go with that one single issue to the people to complete the national democratic task,” Gonsalves said.

In 2009, Vincentians overwhelmingly rejected the proposed revised constitution with 29,019 “no” votes and 22,493 “yes” votes.

“I agree that we are now 12 years away from the referendum,” said Gonsalves, who had previously said that he would leave the question of constitutional reform to future leaders.

On November 30, last year, Barbados removed the Queen of England as its head of state, electing Dame Sandra Mason as its first local head of state.

Earlier, opposition lawmaker, Major St Clair Leacock, who is a vice-president of the main opposition New Democratic Party (NDP) noted that Gonsalves had recently received the highest national award from the Cuban government.

He said this raises the question of national awards or rewards for Vincentians for meritorious service.

“What is stopping us?” Leacock said.

Gonsalves said also that if there is bipartisan support for the referendum a committee will also be set up to establish national honours, calling further for a simultaneous establishment of a body “to carry out a process of decolonisation in names.

“We change the name of Victoria Park. We change the name of Higginson Street and other places. Murrays Road, cause is a colonial administrator. And we do that, especially at this time of fresh hope….”

Gonsalves also suggested that at the same time the country would go forward with the recommendation to name as national heroes, George Augustus McIntosh, Ebenezer Theodore Joshua, Robert Milton Cato, and JP Eustace.

He suggested that there be “all party unity” on this, though the law does not require it.

Prime Minister Gonsalves said the National Heroes Committee would have to be reconstituted, as one member has died and two other members have “resigned or are not in the committee no more”.

He said the committee would also consider “whether or not one or two women who are deserving to fit the criteria of national hero, and get on with the process to support constitutional decolonisation to support the entire process of mental decolonisation and these steps along the way.

“So, I propose that matter. The Leader of the Opposition, are you ready for us to go to a referendum on removing the Queen? And I will tell the people of St Vincent and the Grenadines, if you start the process and say ‘yes’ and anytime you dance and start say ‘no’, I pull the plug on the process.”

However, Leacock, noted that there are other Caribbean countries, including Jamaica that are not republics but have national awards.

“Why is republicanism a prerequisite to have a system of award?” the opposition lawmaker said.

But Gonsalves said that Vincentians validated politically the Queen as head of state of the country.

“Before, it was a negotiated fiction, you now make it a political reality. The NDP, by your leadership; you can’t duck that,” he said.

Caribbean

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