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 Montserrat| Facts & Figures |
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| Status: Overseas territory Governor: Deborah Barnes Jones
(2004) Chief Minister: Lowell Lewis
(2006) Land area: 39 sq mi (100 sq km) Population (2008 est.): 9,638 (growth
rate: 1.0%); birth rate: 17.3/1000; infant mortality rate: 6.8/1000;
life expectancy: 79.1; density per sq mi: 94 Capital (2003 est.): Plymouth. The city
was abandoned in 1997 due to volcanic activity. Interim government
buildings have been built at Brades Estate, in the Carr's Bay/Little
Bay vicinity at the northwest end of Montserrat Monetary unit: East Caribbean
dollar More Facts & Figures |
The island of Montserrat is in the Lesser
Antilles of the West Indies. Until 1956, it was a division of the Leeward
Islands. In 1958 Montserrat joined the Federation of the West Indies,
remaining a member until that organization's dissolution in 1962. Unlike
most other British West Indies possessions, Montserrat, with its weak
economy, has not vigorously sought independence. The Soufrière
Hills volcano began erupting in 1995, and the situation continued to
worsen through 1998, with the capital, Plymouth, destroyed and the
southern and central parts of the British colony having been evacuated.
Thousands had moved to nearby Antigua, Britain, or other parts of the
Caribbean. In 2005, the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security revoked the
“temporary protected status” of its 292 Montserrat refugees, a
number of whom have lived in the U.S. for years and rebuilt their lives
there. A
Washington Post
editorial called the decision
“absurd and cruel.”
See also
Encyclopedia:
Montserrat
.
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