The UK Overseas Territories are a
vital and valued part of
the wider UK family. The
Territories stretch across the globe, from
the likes of Anguilla in
the Caribbean to the Falkland
Islands in the South Atlantic, the Pitcairn
Islands in the South Pacific, and Gibraltar on the
European mainland. They enrich our social,
cultural, environmental and economic
life through abundant biodiversity, thriving
financial sectors,
and their vital strategic significance. The
Territories are, however, also uniquely exposed
to global challenges and geopolitical
uncertainty. The UK Government
must fulfil its promise to
ensure its relationship with
them is one of “openness
and mutual respect”, according to the
House of Lords Constitution
Committee.
In a letter published
today to MP,
Minister of State for the UK Overseas Territories,
the Committee has set out the
findings of its inquiry into the 2023 UK-Overseas
Territories Joint Declaration. It has made a
number of recommendations on how
to strengthen the UK's relationship
with the Overseas Territories,
including:
-
A new White Paper should be
published in the next parliamentary session. This
is urgently needed to bring together the confusing patchwork of
documents and principles - which have
proliferated since the
publication of
the badly outdated 2012 White Paper
- into a
single policy framework. It would also provide
a valuable opportunity for the UK
Government, together with the Overseas Territories, to think
more strategically about their constitutional
relationship and its
future.
-
The UK Government, working with
the Overseas Territories, must ensure that the commitments
and principles within the 2023 UK-Overseas Territories Joint
Declaration are at the forefront of their day-to-day
engagement. To facilitate this, formal mechanisms should be
established to monitor, and report on, progress against the
commitments made within the Joint Declaration.
-
The regular turnover of FCDO
ministers and officials has had a detrimental impact on
inter-personal relationships with the Overseas Territories
and institutional memory. The Government
should only make changes to ministerial and
official responsibilities for the Overseas
Territories sparingly,
and should ensure
that structures for effective engagement
are deeply embedded so that they are not vulnerable to
changing personalities. The Government should also
review the appropriateness of ministerial responsibility for
the Overseas Territories remaining with the FCDO.
-
Positive
engagement between the UK Government and the
Overseas Territories requires early engagement,
ongoing and transparent communication, and clarity about
roles and responsibilities. These principles should be
embedded across all Government
departments as a routine part
of their engagement with the
Overseas Territories, and should be
reflected in the UK Government's new
Charter of Engagement. A list
of officials within each department
responsible for matters relating to the Overseas
Territories should be made available to Territory
Governments as soon as possible,
and updated
annually.
,
Chair of the Constitution Committee
said:
“The relationship between the
UK Government and the Overseas Territories is of
fundamental constitutional importance. It
has matured
and modernised significantly in recent decades and is
in many respects positive and
constructive.
“The Overseas
Territories do not always
feel appropriately respected or valued,
and the 2012 White Paper is now badly out of
date. A
cross-Whitehall culture that respects and values the Overseas
Territories is central to effective
engagement. The UK
Government must ensure that the Overseas
Territories are not
reliant solely on personal
relationships
with motivated ministers and
officials to ensure
they are informed, consulted, and engaged
in decision-making.
“The Overseas Territories play
a vital societal, cultural, environmental, economic and
strategic role as an integral part of
the wider UK family. The UK Government must commit to structurally
embedding the features of positive engagement with the Overseas
Territories, to support a respectful, reciprocal and constructive
relationship for the long-term. This should begin with the
publication of a new White Paper in the next parliamentary
session.”
Note to
editors
-
This
letter summarises the findings of the committee's
inquiry into the 2023 UK-Overseas Territories Joint
Declaration. The inquiry has reviewed progress against the
commitments set out in the Joint Declaration, as well as the
mechanisms for engagement between the UK and
the Overseas Territories, and the extent to which they
are effective. More information about the inquiry is
available here.