- Foreign relations of Jamaica
Jamaica has diplomatic relations with most nations and is a member of theUnited Nations and theOrganization of American States . In the follow-on meetings to the December 1994Summit of the Americas , Jamaica--together withUruguay --was given the responsibility of coordinating discussions on invigorating society. Jamaica also chairs theWorking Group on Smaller Economies .Jamaica is an active member of the
Commonwealth of Nations and the Non-Aligned Movement (G-77). Jamaica is a beneficiary of the Lome Conventions, through which the European Union (EU) grants trade preferences to selected states in Asia, the Caribbean, and the Pacific, and has played a leading role in the negotiations of the successor agreement in Fiji in 2000.Historically, Jamaica has had close ties with the UK, but trade, financial, and cultural relations with the United States are now predominant. Jamaica is linked with the other countries of the English-speaking Caribbean through the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM), and more broadly through theAssociation of Caribbean States (ACS). In January 2000, Jamaica began serving a 2-year term on theUnited Nations Security Council .Prime Minister
Percival James Patterson visitedCuba at the end of May 1997. In the fall of 1997, Jamaica upgraded its consulate in Havana to an embassy, and the nonresident Jamaican ambassador toCuba was replaced by a resident ambassador.Disputes - international:none
Illicit drugs:
Transshipment point for cocaine from Central and South America to North America and Europe; illicit cultivation ofcannabis ; government has an active manual cannabis eradication programA good resource about Jamaica's foreign policies is Holger Henke's book "Between Self-Determination and Dependency: Jamaica's Foreign Relations, 1972-89," Kingston: University of the West Indies Press 2000.
ee also
*
Jamaica
*Diplomatic missions of Jamaica
*List of diplomatic missions in Jamaica
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