Last Updated on Saturday, 30 November 2024, 13:03 by Denis Chabrol

Suriname’s Foreign Affairs Minister Albert Ramdin
Suriname’s Foreign Affairs Minister Albert Ramdin on Saturday said he was confident that he was well on his way to being elected the next Secretary General of the 34-nation Organisation of American States (OAS), having already secured concrete support from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) bloc of nations and several Latin American countries.
“So far, we have received on the basis of solid, substantive campaigning good support and from my experience at the OAS, that is the only way to engage member states,” Ramdin, a former OAS Assistant Secretary General from 2005 to 2015, told Demerara Waves Online News.
Ramdin said he has already secured formal endorsements from Honduras, Chile and Peru and so, along with CARICOM’s 14 votes, he was closer to clinching the required 18 votes at next March’s elections to succeed incumbent OAS Chief , Luis Almagro who was elected in 2015. “There is a strong aspiration to occupy that post so it’s a strong endorsement. I have been around and I have seen how countries are campaigning for what now is called the CARICOM candidate,” he said.
The Surinamese Foreign Minister expressed his displeasure at objections by his lone rival, Paraguay’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Rubén Ramírez Lezcano’s objections about the OAS’ budget.
Ramdin also served as Suriname’s Permanent Representative to the OAS from 1997 to 1999 and CARICOM Assistant Secretary General for Foreign and Community Relations from 1999 to 2001.
Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua are not actively participating in the OAS’ work.
Source: politics.einnews.com…
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