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Pierre Charles, Prime Minister of the Commonwealth of Dominica Oct 2000 – Jan 2004
Biographical
notes by Dr. Lennox Honychurch
www.lennoxhonychurch.com
Pierre Charles, community worker, teacher, farmer, Prime Minister, was born
at Grand Bay in southern Dominica on 30 June 1954. He attended the Grand Bay Boys’ School from 1956 to 1967 and then
moved on to the Dominica Grammar School from 1967 to 1970, before ending his high school education at the St. Mary’s
Academy from 1970 to 1972. He went into teaching at Grand Bay and attended the Dominica Teacher’s Training College from
1978 to 1979. From these early days, he was popularly known as “Pierro”. During the 1970s he was in the forefront
of community awareness projects and political activism, particularly in the Grand Bay area, assisting with the organization
of the group, L’Echelle, which was one of several politically vibrant youth groups existing in Dominica at the time.
Its leaders were inspired by the spirit of the left wing Caribbean political ideology of that period and had an informal network
of fellow activists extending to Grenada, St. Vincent and St. Lucia. Their sympathies lay with the international non-aligned
movement, made up mainly of so-called Third World countries that positioned themselves along the dividing line of Cold War
politics of that era.
L’Echelle took part in Rosie Douglas’ “(Popular) Independence
Committees” in the run up to Dominica’s independence in 1978. When the political crisis of May – June 1979
broke, Pierre Charles, representing the (National) Youth Council, became one of the members of the Committee for National
Salvation (CNS) that brokered a solution to the constitutional impasse. When Hurricane David struck in August 1979, Grand
Bay was one of the worst hit communities and Charles was leader in reconstruction efforts there. Meanwhile, in the new reorganized
parliament that was set up in June 1979, Charles was appointed a Senator, serving until the General Election of July 1980.
In this political position Charles had to give up his teaching job in the public
service and along with Athie Martin and others established Farm to Market, an organization aimed at marketing Dominica’s
agricultural produce abroad, in which he served as operations manager and later field manager until it folded in 1988. During
this time he won the Grand Bay seat in the House of Assembly in the general elections of 1985, becoming an opposition parliamentarian
for the Dominica Labour Party under the leadership of Michael Douglas. He maintained this seat in the general elections of
1990, 1995 and 2000 when the Dominica Labour Party returned to power (in coalition with the Dominica Freedom Party) after
a gap of twenty years. Charles became Minister of Communication and Works in a Cabinet headed by Prime Minster Rosie Douglas.
When Douglas died suddenly on 1 October 2000, Pierre Charles was his obvious successor and was thrust in to the position of
head of government as the economy of the island was slipping rapidly into crisis, a situation that Dominicans had been warned
about as early as 1993 by Dome Eugenia Charles during her last term in office. Prime Minister, Pierre Charles’ challenge
had been to find ways of stemming the slide, dealing with the IMF and seeking debt relief. This was not made any easier by
a series of alarms in relation to his health and the need to seek treatment for his heart condition abroad, a condition that
ultimately led to his sudden death on the evening of 6 January 2004.
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