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 Antigua and Barbuda| Facts & Figures |
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| Sovereign: Queen Elizabeth II
(1952) Governor-General: Louise Lake-Tack
(2007) Prime Minister: Baldwin Spencer
(2004) Total area: 170 sq mi (440 sq km) Population (2012 est.): 89,018 (growth
rate: 1.28%); birth rate: 16.19/1000; infant mortality rate:
14.17/1000; life expectancy: 75.69; density per sq mi: 409
Capital and largest city (2009 est.):
St. John's, 27,000 Other large cities: English
Harbour, 2,900; Codrington (capital of Barbuda), est. pop. 870 Monetary unit: East Caribbean
dollar More Facts & Figures |
GeographyAntigua, the larger of the two main islands, is
108 sq mi (280 sq km). The island dependencies of Redonda (an uninhabited
rocky islet) and Barbuda (a coral island formerly known as Dulcina) are
0.5 sq mi (1.30 sq km) and 62 sq mi (161 sq km), respectively.
GovernmentConstitutional monarchy.
HistoryThe island of Antigua was explored by
Christopher Columbus in 1493 and named for the Church of Santa Maria de la
Antigua in Seville. Antigua was colonized by Britain in 1632; Barbuda was
first colonized in 1678. Antigua and Barbuda joined the West Indies
Federation in 1958. With the breakup of the federation, it became one of
the West Indies Associated States in 1967, self-governing its internal
affairs. Full independence was granted Nov. 1, 1981.
The Bird family has controlled the islands since
Vere C. Bird founded the Antigua Labor Party in the mid-1940s. While
tourism and financial services have turned the country into one of the
more prosperous in the Caribbean, law enforcement officials have charged
that Antigua and Barbuda is a major center of money laundering, drug
trafficking, and arms smuggling. Several scandals tainted the Bird family,
especially the 1995 conviction of Prime Minister Lester Bird's brother,
Ivor, for cocaine smuggling. In 2000, Antigua and 35 other offshore
banking centers agreed to reforms to prevent money laundering.
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