INTRODUCTION
Antigua and Barbuda, an independent island nation located on the eastern edge of the Caribbean Sea. The country comprises three main islands—Antigua, Barbuda, and Redonda.
Antigua’s Harbors
Beautiful beaches and excellent anchorage at English Harbor on Antigua’s southern coast attract many tourists. Since the harbor at the capital city of Saint John’s was dredged, larger boats have access to the north side of the island nation.
Antigua and Barbuda is one of the more prosperous of the Caribbean nations. The islands attract hundreds of thousands of tourists each year, and the nation’s economy is dependent on tourism. Antigua’s beaches are noted for their beauty. Cruise ships sailing the southern Caribbean often dock at the island. Numerous coral reefs and sunken ships surround Barbuda and Antigua, making for great snorkeling and diving.
Europeans first visited the islands when Christopher Columbus landed in 1493 on his second voyage to the Americas. Antigua and Barbuda were British colonies from 1632 until they achieved independence in 1981. The majority of the population is descended from African slaves brought to the islands to work on cotton and sugar cane plantations, and the islands’ culture developed from a mixture of African, West Indian, and British influences.
LAND AND CLIMATE
Geography of Antigua and Barbuda
Area 442 sq km
171 sq mi
Coastline 153 km
95 mi
Highest point Boggy Peak
470 m/1,542 ft
Antigua and Barbuda lies at the southern end of the Leeward Islands chain, which is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Caribbean Sea to the west. The country has a total area of 442 sq km (171 sq mi), of which Antigua accounts for 280 sq km (108 sq mi), Barbuda for 160.6 sq km (62 sq mi), and Redonda for 1.3 sq km (0.5 sq mi). The capital, largest town, and main port is Saint John’s, on Antigua. The country’s nearest neighbors are the islands of Saint Kitts and Nevis to the west, Montserrat to the southwest, and Guadeloupe to the south.
English Harbor, Antigua
A rainbow appears over picturesque English Harbor, a historic district on the southern coast of Antigua.
Antigua is low-lying with rolling hills made up of volcanic rock, coral, and limestone. Its highest point is Boggy Peak at 470 m (1,542 ft). The coastline is composed of coves and bays and is known for its 365 beaches. Barbuda is a flat coral island with areas of mangrove swamp and sandy beaches. Coral reefs encircle the island. Redonda is a small, uninhabited rocky islet.
The climate of the islands is tropical, but drier than that of the other Leeward Islands. Rainfall averages 1,000 mm (40 in) a year; other low-lying islands of the group receive about 1,250 to 2,000 mm (50 to 80 in). The wettest months are July to November. Temperatures range from 21° to 32°C (70° to 89°F), with the coolest months being January to March. The islands are at risk from tropical storms and hurricanes.
PLANTS AND ANIMALS
Barbuda's Frigate Bird Sanctuary
The Caribbean island of Barbuda is a favorite nesting spot for the magnificent frigate bird. These large water birds, whose wingspans stretch up to 2.1 meters (7 feet), prefer the northwest lagoon, where the Frigate Bird Sanctuary has been created. Accessible only by boat, the sanctuary is home to more than 170 species of birds.
The native forest on Antigua was cleared by settlers to grow the sugarcane that was once the main export, and there are now few areas of woodland. Land animals are also scarce. However, the islands have a tremendous variety of birds, including many colorful tropical varieties. Barbuda has a colony of frigate birds, avian pirates who steal food from other birds; the males are known for the beauty of their puffed-up red chests. Hawksbill turtles, an endangered species, lay their eggs on the beach at Pasture Bay, Long Island, which lies just off Antigua.
IV. POPULATION
People of Antigua and Barbuda
Population 69,842 (2008 estimate)
Population density 158 persons per sq km
408 persons per sq mi (2008 estimate)
Urban population distribution 38 percent (2005 estimate)
Rural population distribution 61 percent (2005 estimate)
Largest city, with population Saint John’s, 28,000 (2003 estimate)
Official language English
Chief religious affiliations Anglican, 33 percent
Protestant, 31 percent
Roman Catholic, 12 percent
Life expectancy 72.7 years (2008 estimate)
Infant mortality rate 18 deaths per 1,000 live births (2008 estimate)
Literacy rate 89 percent (1995)
Antigua and Barbuda has a total population of 69,842 (2008 estimate). The great majority of th
population lives on Antigua; only about 2 percent lives on Barbuda. About 38 percent of the population lives in urban areas, primarily in the capital, Saint John’s (population, 2003 estimate, 28,000). Other large settlements on Antigua include All Saints (2,230) and Liberta (1,473). Codrington (1,200) is the only significant settlement on Barbuda. The population density is about 158 (408 per sq mi).
Produce Market
Farmers sell their produce at open-air markets in Saint John’s, capital of the Caribbean island-state of Antigua and Barbuda.
More than 91 percent of the population is black, descended from African slaves brought to work on the sugar plantations. Most of the remainder is of mixed ethnic origin or white, although there are also minorities of Syrian-Lebanese, East Asian, and Native American descent.Christianity is the religion of the vast majority of the population, with about three-fourths of the people belonging to Protestant denominations, mainly Anglican, Moravian, Methodist, and Seventh-Day Adventist. There are also Roman Catholics, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and Rastafarians.
English is the official language of Antigua and Barbuda. However, Leeward Caribbean Creole English, an English-based creole, is the language used in informal situations by the majority of the population. Arabic, Portuguese, and some Indian languages are nonindigenous languages spoken by minorities in some parts of the islands.
Culture
Antigua and Barbuda: Soca Music
In Trinidad and Tobago, Antigua and Barbuda, and most of the English-speaking Caribbean, a topical narrative music form called calypso became popular in the early 1950s. This music, associated with pre-Lenten carnival celebrations, features clever lyrics commenting on social and political issues. By the 1960s, calypso had traveled to the United States and to other Caribbean islands, giving rise to new popular music forms. One of the most significant is soca, which means "soul-calypso" and refers to an energetic disco-influenced dance style. Soca features the steel drums of calypso along with guitars and drum set. The percussive rhythm of Shango, Trinidad and Tobago's Afro-Caribbean religious music, is also at the core of soca. After elements of American funk were added, the music was rechristened "rotto beat" or "rooto beat." This example from Antigua and Barbuda, called "Hot Hot Hot," is performed by the Cable Wireless Hell's Gate Pan Band.
Antigua holds a celebrated carnival at the end of July, with costumed dancing through the streets behind steel bands. Barbuda has a smaller carnival in June, known as caribana. The game of cricket is also quite popular in Antigua and Barbuda, and the islands have produced some famous cricket players in modern times: the fast bowlers Andy Roberts and Curtly Ambrose, and the batsman Vivian Richards.
Economy of Antigua and Barbuda
Gross domestic product (GDP in U.S.$) $998 million (2006)
GDP per capita (U.S.$) $11,868.10 (2006)
Monetary unit 1 East Caribbean dollar (EC$), consisting of 100 cents
Number of workers Not available
Unemployment rate 6 percent (1997)
The economy of Antigua and Barbuda is dependent on tourism and offshore banking. The country’s gross national product (GNP) is about U.S.$759 million (2004 World Bank estimate), giving a per capita income of U.S.$11,050. Hotels and restaurants contribute about one-fourth of the gross domestic product (GDP), and the industry employs around one-third of the labor force. In 2006 there were 273,000 tourists (including cruise-ship visitors). The tourism receipts are some U.S.$327 million a year, compared with merchandise exports of U.S.$22.5 million. There has been considerable investment in infrastructure to support the tourist industry, including the expansion of airport and harbor facilities, road improvements, and hotel construction.
Tourism Magnet
Tourism Magnet
White sandy beaches border the rolling terrain of Antigua and Barbuda, a Caribbean nation in the Lesser Antilles. Since gaining its independence from the United Kingdom in 1981, the island nation has attracted visitors from all over the world because of its superb climate, which averages a mild 27°C (81°F), and its many beach resorts. Tourism has become the mainstay of the nation's economy.
The country’s economy is at the mercy of the weather, however. Hurricanes can be devastating, driving tourists away and causing hotels to remain closed for repairs for months. In the past the decline in tax income and budget revenues and increase in public spending on repairs due to hurricane damage has forced the government to introduce austerity programs.
The monetary unit of Antigua and Barbuda is the East Caribbean (EC) dollar of 100 cents (2.70 East Caribbean dollars equal U.S.$1, a fixed rate since 1976).
The growth of the tourist industry has created some environmental problems, including uncontrolled disposal of sewage from hotels on the beach. Hotel development also threatens the Antiguan mangrove trees. Water management is another major area of concern because of limited natural freshwater resources. Coral reefs that surround the islands have suffered disturbance to their ecosystem as a result of fishing, which has nearly doubled since 1980.
Antigua and Barbuda is a constitutional monarchy. The British monarch, represented by a governor-general, is the head of state.
The prime minister is the head of government. There are two legislative houses, the House of Representatives and the Senate; both have 17 seats. One of the seats in the House of Representatives is allocated to Barbuda and all members are elected for up to five-year terms by universal adult suffrage. The Senate is composed of 11 members appointed by the governor-general on the advice of the prime minister, 4 on the advice of the leader of the opposition, 1 at the discretion of the governor-general, and 1 on the advice of the Barbudan Council, which is responsible for local government on that island.
The two main political parties in Antigua and Barbuda are the United Progressive Party (UPP) and the Antigua Labour Party (ALP). The Barbuda People’s Movement (BPM) is one of the larger minority parties.
The state provides free medical care, and the social security system supplies benefits for senior citizens and sick or disabled people. Life expectancy is 70.3 years for males and 75.2 years for females (2008).
HISTORY
The first inhabitants of the islands were the Ciboney, who were related to the Arawak. Archaeological evidence points to settlements dating from around 2400 BC. Between AD 35 and 1100 the Arawak lived on Antigua, but the Carib were in residence at the time of the arrival of Christopher Columbus in 1493, during his second voyage. He named the island Santa MarĂa de la Antigua after a church in Seville, Spain, but did not settle it. Subsequent attempts by both the French and Spanish to establish colonies were fought off by the Carib.
Colonization
Antigua, West Indies
Antigua Island, in the West Indies, is an independent state with ties to Britain. The Native American people known as the Carib were living on the islands when Christopher Columbus arrived in 1493. A British settlement eventually colonized the island in 1632.
It was not until 1632 that Antigua was successfully colonized by the British. Apart from a brief interlude of French rule in 1666, the island and its dependencies, Barbuda and Redonda, remained under British control until independence in 1981.
The first sugar plantation was established in 1674 by Sir Christopher Codrington. Barbuda, colonized by the British in 1678, was leased by the Codrington family until the late 19th century, when it reverted back to the British crown. It was used by them to raise provisions for the slaves introduced to clear the forests of Antigua and plant sugarcane.
Sugarcane Tradition of Antigua and Barbuda
The history of sugarcane production in Antigua and Barbuda is reflected in a mural of black laborers harvesting with machetes. The British introduced sugarcane to the Caribbean island nation in the 1630s; they also enslaved black Africans and brought them to work the cane plantations. Although not as important as it once was, sugarcane still retains a vital role in the Antiguan economy.
Antigua was a valuable colony, not only for the sugar grown there, but also for its deep natural harbors, notably at Saint John’s and at Falmouth on the southeastern side of the island. Ships were refitted there safe from attack, and during the 17th and 18th centuries fortifications were built, many of which still survive, notably Shirley Heights and Nelson’s Dockyard in Saint John’s.
Horatio Nelson, a famous British naval commander, served for nearly three years in Antigua as a young man, and visited the island again in 1805 during his pursuit of a French fleet, which ended with the Battle of Trafalgar. The future king William IV was also on Antigua, as a young midshipman, in the 1780s.
Slavery was abolished on the islands in 1834, but the resulting freedom was limited and brought little respite from the harsh working conditions on the sugar estates. There was no land available for the freed slaves and the plantation owners continued to treat them as they had before. By the 20th century tension had risen and workers protested violently against low wages, food shortages, and poor living conditions. In 1939 the first labor movement was formed to try to resolve persistent problems.
Rise of the Antigua Labour Party
Vere Cornwall Bird became the president of the labor movement in 1943 and, with other trade unionists, formed the Antigua Labour Party (ALP). In 1946 the ALP won the first of many elections. Bird, his family, and the ALP then dominated Antiguan politics for decades.
In 1967 Antigua attained associated status with the United Kingdom, an arrangement that gave it full internal self-government. It achieved independence in November 1981 as a single territory with Barbuda, despite a campaign for separate independence by the Barbudans. As a concession to enable independence to go ahead, Barbuda was granted considerable internal autonomy. However, the pressures for separation have not gone away; the Barbudan People’s Movement, which advocates self-government, has since dominated Barbuda’s politics. Antigua and Barbuda is a member of the Commonwealth of Nations.
After Independence
Bird was the first prime minister after independence and remained in office until his retirement in 1993. He was succeeded by one of his sons, Lester Bird, following the general election of 1994. After his election, Lester Bird tried to portray a professional image as prime minister and paid particular attention to the economy.
However, scandals and allegations of corruption beset Lester Bird’s family and the government. In 1990 an international arms-smuggling ring was exposed and a judicial inquiry investigated the involvement of Lester’s brother, Vere Bird, Jr. In 1996 another brother, Ivor Bird, was arrested and fined for handling cocaine. At the same time, Lester Bird’s finance minister was forced to resign amid controversy over his alleged failure to pay customs duty on an imported vintage Rolls-Royce car.
The offshore banking sector has also come under pressure to reform, following allegations of money laundering. In February 1997 the government closed down five Russian-owned banks that were suspected of laundering money.
In spite of the scandals, Lester Bird’s Antigua Labour Party was reelected in 1999. Bird appointed several new ministers, among them his brother Vere, Jr., who had been banned from public office since 1990. In the 2004 general election, however, the opposing United Progressive Party won a majority in the House of Representatives. Lester Bird conceded defeat and handed over the prime ministership to Baldwin Spencer of the UPP.
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