CARICOM mourns passing of Miles Stoby

Miles Stoby (left), Permanent Observer for the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) to the United Nations, presents his credentials to Secretary-General Kofi Annan, at UN Headquarters, 5 October 2005.
Miles Stoby (left), Permanent Observer for the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) to the United Nations, presents his credentials to Secretary-General Kofi Annan, at UN Headquarters, 5 October 2005.

CARICOM today expressed condolences on the passing of Guyanese international civil servant Miles Stoby.

A statement from CARICOM follows:

The Caribbean region is mourning the death of one of its most highly respected international public servants, Mr Miles Stoby, who retired from the United Nations Secretariat after decades of service, most of it in the area of economic and social development.
 

Miles Stoby died on May 19 in Muscat, Oman, where he resided.   Guyanese by birth, he joined the Guyana Foreign Service after completing studies at Cambridge University in the United Kingdom. His first external posting was in the then joint Guyana/Barbados Embassy in Washington D.C.  He subsequently served in Guyana’s Permanent Mission to the UN and Guyana’s Embassy in Brazil. Thereafter he joined the United Nations Secretariat and served in increasingly senior positions, reaching the level of Assistant Secretary General in the office of the United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan.
 

Mr Stoby served, in 1992, as Secretary of the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development, known as the Rio Summit, and later as Coordinator of preparations for the Millennium Summit and Assembly, the largest gathering of Heads of State that has ever taken place internationally. In its seminal Declaration, leaders committed to reduce extreme poverty and set time-bound targets which became known as the Millennium Development Goals.

 

Yet perhaps one of the greatest highlights of his professional career, and the one that gave him the most satisfaction as a Caribbean man, was the organization of the first UN Conference on the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States (SIDS) that was hosted by Barbados in 1994. He was the Coordinator of the Conference Secretariat. At this juncture in the international debate on Climate Change and Environmental Sustainability, it is perhaps fitting that we remember the groundbreaking role of that First SIDS Conference, and the skill with which Miles Stoby steered the process to a successful conclusion.
 

Following his retirement, Miles Stoby was again of direct service to the Caribbean region when he held the position of Ambassador and Permanent Observer of CARICOM to the United Nations in New York during the period August 2005 to May 2006.
 

Miles Stoby was married to Lyutha Al-Mughairy, also herself a former staff member of the UN Secretariat and later the Ambassador of Oman to the United Nations in New York and more recently to The Federal Republic of Germany. They had one daughter Aisha Stoby. He was also the father of Tanya and Lara, and the brother of Robin.
 

In addition to his immediate family members, he also leaves to mourn a host of friends and former UN colleagues around the Caribbean and indeed globally. Above all he leaves fond memories among all those he mentored, championed or in any way befriended, of a warm, generous and committed human being. May he rest in peace.