Antigua and Barbuda

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Overview

 

If you have ever visited an offshore Internet gambling website, chances are you visited Antigua and Barbuda, a small island nation in the Caribbean that has become a popular host for online gambling sites. While this has led to some tensions between the U.S. and Antiguan governments, relations are generally friendly, and this English-speaking democracy is a popular destination for American travelers. 
more less
Basic Information

 

Lay of the Land: The country of Antigua and Barbuda comprises two main islands that give the nation its name. Antigua, which is nearly twice the size of Barbuda, is a small, hilly island in the eastern Caribbean, with rocky coasts, few springs, and a tendency to drought. During 350 years of colonial rule, British plantation owners replaced Antigua’s native forests with fields of sugarcane and cotton. Antigua is the main population center and the focus for government, business and tourism. Barbuda, which lies about 25 miles north of Antigua, is home to one town, about 1500 people and a sanctuary for frigate birds. The islands constitute an area of 171 square miles, roughly 2½ times the size of Washington, D.C. The capital is St. John’s, a city of about 31,000 people. Part of the Lesser Antilles archipelago about 500 miles north of Venezuela, where the Caribbean ends and the Atlantic begins, Antigua and Barbuda enjoy a maritime tropical climate. To the south lie the islands of Guadeloupe, Dominica, Martinique, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Barbados, Grenada and Trinidad and Tobago. Montserrat is to the southwest; Saint Kitts and Nevis and Saint Eustatius are to the west, and Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin and Anguilla are to the northwest. San Juan, Puerto Rico is only 300 miles to the west. 
 
Population: 84,097 (2006)
 
Religions: Christian 93.0% (predominately Anglican, Evangelical), non-religious 4.2%, Rastafarian 1.9%, Muslim 0.3%, Hindu 0.3%,
 
Ethnic Groups: African 91%, mixed African-European 4.4%, other 2.9%, European 1.7%.
 
Languages: Antigua and Barbuda Creole English 98.0%, English (official); Literacy is above 85%.
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History

Pre-ceramic Amerindians were the first to inhabit the islands of Antigua and Barbuda around 2400 BC. Later, Arawak and Carib Amerindian tribes populated the islands. Christopher Columbus landed on Antigua during his second trip in 1493 and named the main island Santa Maria de la Antigua. The British began to colonize in 1632, beginning 350 years of rule, interrupted only by a very brief French interlude in 1666. The British replaced the subsistence agriculture of the Amerindians with a plantation economy based on sugarcane production for export. They imported thousands of Africans to work as slaves on their sugar plantations under brutal conditions that led to high death rates. Slavery was abolished throughout the British Empire in 1834, but the slaves of Antigua and Barbuda found their condition little changed because they had no access to arable land or credit. Beginning in the 1940s, a labor movement among the sugarcane workers became the basis for an increasingly vocal independence movement, which was led by Vere C. Bird, who became the country’s first prime minister in 1981. At that time, Antigua and Barbuda became an independent parliamentary democracy within the British Commonwealth of Nations, with the British monarch serving as the new nation’s Queen as well.

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Antigua and Barbuda's Newspapers
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History of U.S. Relations with Antigua and Barbuda

 

Relations between the U.S. and Antigua and Barbuda have been generally peaceful and focused on trade and tourism. During the late 1990s, allegations of corruption, money laundering, drug smuggling and gun running surfaced against the family of aging Prime Minister Vere C. Bird. These issues strained relations between the U.S. and Antigua and Barbuda. In 1990, Bird’s son was directly implicated in illegally shipping assault weapons to a Colombian drug cartel. In 1995, the Prime Minister’s brother, Ivor, was convicted of cocaine smuggling and fined. The following year, American officials expressed concern that Russian organized crime was infiltrating the country. Throughout this period, alleged money laundering (PDF) by Antiguan banks generated a great deal of negative publicity and international concern. In 1999, the U.K. issued an advisory to British financial institutions that Antigua and Barbuda’s anti-money laundering laws were insufficient. Under pressure from both the U.K. and the U.S., in 2000 Antigua and Barbuda strengthened its financial laws and regulations, and the issue is considered to have been largely resolved. 
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Current U.S. Relations with Antigua and Barbuda

 

By far the main point of contact between Americans and Antiguans lies in tourism. 66,644 Americans visited Antigua and Barbuda in 2005. Since 2002, the number of visitors has fluctuated between a low of 60,680 in 2002 and a high of 70,531 in 2004. Meanwhile, 20,949 Antiguans visited the U.S. in 2006, 4.9% more than the 19,966 that visited in 2005. The number of visitors has gradually increased every year since 2002, when 16,317 islanders came to the mainland. Both countries host expatriate communities of the other’s citizens. About 4,500 Americans live in Antigua and Barbuda, mainly in the capital of St. John’s, which boasts one of the finest medical schools in the Caribbean, the American University of Antigua College of Medicine, where nearly 500 American students study medicine. All told, 84,343 British West Indians (a category including Antiguans and Barbudans) live in the U.S., many of them students.   
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Where Does the Money Flow

 

Antigua and Barbuda’s most important industry is tourism, which contributes 60% of GDP and most of the jobs, with most visitors coming from the U.S. and U.K. In 2007, the U.S. imported $8.7 million of goods from Antigua, including goods being returned to the U.S. after processing, bauxite and aluminum. The U.S. exported more than $240 million of goods to Antigua and Barbuda, mainly petroleum products (20% of the total), machinery and equipment (18%), and food products (9%). 
 
In 2006 the U.S. gave $2 million in aid to Eastern Caribbean countries (i.e., Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines). All of the funding was dedicated to Peace and Security, divided between Foreign Military Financing ($905,000), International Military Education and Training ($695,000), and Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism, and Demining ($404,000). In the 2008 budget, aid decreased to $1.6 million, and was divided between International Military Education and Training ($630,000), International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement ($500,000), and Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism and Demining ($500,000).
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Controversies

 

Are U.S. and U.K. Deportations Creating a Crime Explosion in Antigua and Barbuda?
A recent increase in violent crime, highlighted by the July 2008 slaying of a British newlywed couple, has Antiguan Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer laying part of the blame on the U.K. and U.S., for deporting convicted criminals to the island country.  
 
WTO Trade Dispute Over Internet Gambling
In 2003, Antigua and Barbuda filed a complaint against the U.S. with the World Trade Organization (WTO), alleging that the United States’ refusal to allow Internet gambling websites based in Antigua to offer services to American consumers violated free trade agreements signed by both countries. Antigua won its case in 2005, and the countries are still negotiating a final settlement. 
WTO gives Antigua right to violate U.S. copyrights in gambling dispute (by James Kanter and Gary Rivlin, International Herald Tribune)
The Antigua-US WTO Dispute over Internet Gambling (Antigua Online Gambling Association)
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Human Rights

 

Antigua and Barbuda is a multiparty parliamentary democracy within the British Commonwealth. The last national elections in 2004 were deemed by observers to be free and fair. While the government generally respects the human rights of its citizens, there are a few problem areas, including excessive use of force by police, poor prison conditions, violation of press freedoms, societal discrimination and violence against women, and sexual abuse of children. In general, while the government tolerates criticism in the press and other media, it occasionally harasses its critics, using both legal and extralegal means. 
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Debate
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Past Ambassadors

 

The United States does not maintain an Embassy in Antigua and Barbuda. The U.S. embassy in Bridgetown, Barbados, represents U.S. interests throughout the Eastern Caribbean (i.e., Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines).
 
Name: Milan D. Bish
State of Residency: Nebraska
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Dec 11, 1981
Presentation of Credentials: Jan 8, 1982
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown, Mar 4, 1984
 
Name: Thomas H. Anderson, Jr.
State of Residency: Mississippi
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: May 3, 1984
Presentation of Credentials: Aug 16, 1984
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown Mar 12, 1986
 
Name: Paul A. Russo
State of Residency: Virginia
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Oct 14, 1986
Presentation of Credentials: Dec 4, 1986
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown Jun 15, 1988
 
Name: Jeanette W. Hyde
State of Residency: North Carolina
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Mar 4, 1995
Presentation of Credentials: Apr 10, 1995
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown, Jan 31, 1998
 
Name: E. William Crotty
State of Residency: Florida
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Oct 22, 1998
Presentation of Credentials: Jan 19, 1999
Termination of Mission: Died at Gainesville, Florida, Oct 10, 1999
Note: Left Bridgetown Aug 17, 1999
 
Name: James A. Daley
State of Residency: Massachusetts
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Aug 3, 2000
Presentation of Credentials: Oct 24, 2000
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown Mar 1, 2001
Note: Commissioned during a recess of the Senate; a second nomination of Sep 28, 2000, was not acted upon by the Senate.
 
Name: Earl Norfleet Phillips
State of Residency: North Carolina
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Jan 30, 2002
Presentation of Credentials: Apr 10, 2002
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown Jun 1, 2003
 
Name: Mary Kramer
State of Residency: Iowa
Non-career officer
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Dec 15, 2003
Presentation of Credentials: March 30, 2004
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown, October 30, 2006
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Antigua and Barbuda's Ambassador to the U.S.
ambassador-image Lovell, Deborah-Mae

Deborah-Mae Lovell, a career Antiguan and Barbudan diplomat, presented her credentials as ambassador to the United States on March 8, 2005. Lovell has twenty-five years of experience in the Antigua and Barbuda Foreign Service. She entered the Foreign Service in 1983 as a Third Secretary in the High Commission for Eastern Caribbean States in London. She worked her way through the ranks, holding several positions including Acting High Commissioner in the Antigua and Barbuda office in Ottawa, Canada, where she headed the Mission for three years. She also held the post of Minister Counselor in the Embassy of Antigua and Barbuda in Washington, D.C., as well as in the Permanent Mission of Antigua and Barbuda to the United Nations in New York. Lovell is dually accredited as Ambassador to the United States and as Permanent Representative to the Organization of American States (OAS). 
 

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Antigua and Barbuda's Embassy Web Site in the U.S.
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Comments

scrapeboxmurah 11 years ago
thanks pro sharing with us, i think this website really stands made known : d. actually informative and kind physique organize of content , currently that's user genial (:.i love your prose type genuinely enjoying this mess leaf . http://scrapeboxmurah.blogspot.com/2012/05/iklan-internet-murah-efektif.html
Ultrabook Notebook Tipis Harga Murah Terbaik 12 years ago
thanks on your marvelous posting! i certainly enjoyed reading it, you are an amazing author.i'll make sure to bookmark your blog and will often come again from now on. http://update-seputar-software.blogspot.com/2011/12/ultrabook-notebook-tipis-harga-murah.html
Software Akuntansi Laporan Keuangan Terbaik 12 years ago
when you have posted it, i was conscious of you have seen on this subject, to provide informational messages to our readers it is really. i hope that you will continue to write this kind of blog. thank you for sharing this information.http://update-seputar-software.blogspot.com/2012/01/software-akuntansi-laporan-keuangan.html

Leave a comment

U.S. Ambassador to Antigua and Barbuda

Ourisman, Mary
ambassador-image

Mary Martin Ourisman served as U.S. ambassador to Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean (Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines) from October 31, 2006, until the end of George W. Bush's term as president.
 
She was born February 1, 1946, in Mexia, Texas. She received a B.S. Degree at the University of Texas at Austin in 1970, and further education in the arts and interior design at the Academy of Arts College in San Francisco and the New York School of Interior Design. President George W. Bush appointed her to the Board of Trustees of the Kennedy Center, where she was a founding member of the Center’s International Committee. She has also served on the Board of Trustees of the Washington National Opera. Ourisman has been a member of the Board of Directors of the Blair House, the President’s guest house for foreign Heads of State and is Emeritus Trustee of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. Extremely active in Republican politics, Ourisman and her husband, car tycoon Mandy Ourisman, donated $443,620 to Republican candidates and committees between 1999 and 2006 alone.

more
Bookmark and Share
News
more less
Overview

 

If you have ever visited an offshore Internet gambling website, chances are you visited Antigua and Barbuda, a small island nation in the Caribbean that has become a popular host for online gambling sites. While this has led to some tensions between the U.S. and Antiguan governments, relations are generally friendly, and this English-speaking democracy is a popular destination for American travelers. 
more less
Basic Information

 

Lay of the Land: The country of Antigua and Barbuda comprises two main islands that give the nation its name. Antigua, which is nearly twice the size of Barbuda, is a small, hilly island in the eastern Caribbean, with rocky coasts, few springs, and a tendency to drought. During 350 years of colonial rule, British plantation owners replaced Antigua’s native forests with fields of sugarcane and cotton. Antigua is the main population center and the focus for government, business and tourism. Barbuda, which lies about 25 miles north of Antigua, is home to one town, about 1500 people and a sanctuary for frigate birds. The islands constitute an area of 171 square miles, roughly 2½ times the size of Washington, D.C. The capital is St. John’s, a city of about 31,000 people. Part of the Lesser Antilles archipelago about 500 miles north of Venezuela, where the Caribbean ends and the Atlantic begins, Antigua and Barbuda enjoy a maritime tropical climate. To the south lie the islands of Guadeloupe, Dominica, Martinique, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Barbados, Grenada and Trinidad and Tobago. Montserrat is to the southwest; Saint Kitts and Nevis and Saint Eustatius are to the west, and Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin and Anguilla are to the northwest. San Juan, Puerto Rico is only 300 miles to the west. 
 
Population: 84,097 (2006)
 
Religions: Christian 93.0% (predominately Anglican, Evangelical), non-religious 4.2%, Rastafarian 1.9%, Muslim 0.3%, Hindu 0.3%,
 
Ethnic Groups: African 91%, mixed African-European 4.4%, other 2.9%, European 1.7%.
 
Languages: Antigua and Barbuda Creole English 98.0%, English (official); Literacy is above 85%.
more less
History

Pre-ceramic Amerindians were the first to inhabit the islands of Antigua and Barbuda around 2400 BC. Later, Arawak and Carib Amerindian tribes populated the islands. Christopher Columbus landed on Antigua during his second trip in 1493 and named the main island Santa Maria de la Antigua. The British began to colonize in 1632, beginning 350 years of rule, interrupted only by a very brief French interlude in 1666. The British replaced the subsistence agriculture of the Amerindians with a plantation economy based on sugarcane production for export. They imported thousands of Africans to work as slaves on their sugar plantations under brutal conditions that led to high death rates. Slavery was abolished throughout the British Empire in 1834, but the slaves of Antigua and Barbuda found their condition little changed because they had no access to arable land or credit. Beginning in the 1940s, a labor movement among the sugarcane workers became the basis for an increasingly vocal independence movement, which was led by Vere C. Bird, who became the country’s first prime minister in 1981. At that time, Antigua and Barbuda became an independent parliamentary democracy within the British Commonwealth of Nations, with the British monarch serving as the new nation’s Queen as well.

more less
Antigua and Barbuda's Newspapers
more less
History of U.S. Relations with Antigua and Barbuda

 

Relations between the U.S. and Antigua and Barbuda have been generally peaceful and focused on trade and tourism. During the late 1990s, allegations of corruption, money laundering, drug smuggling and gun running surfaced against the family of aging Prime Minister Vere C. Bird. These issues strained relations between the U.S. and Antigua and Barbuda. In 1990, Bird’s son was directly implicated in illegally shipping assault weapons to a Colombian drug cartel. In 1995, the Prime Minister’s brother, Ivor, was convicted of cocaine smuggling and fined. The following year, American officials expressed concern that Russian organized crime was infiltrating the country. Throughout this period, alleged money laundering (PDF) by Antiguan banks generated a great deal of negative publicity and international concern. In 1999, the U.K. issued an advisory to British financial institutions that Antigua and Barbuda’s anti-money laundering laws were insufficient. Under pressure from both the U.K. and the U.S., in 2000 Antigua and Barbuda strengthened its financial laws and regulations, and the issue is considered to have been largely resolved. 
more less
Current U.S. Relations with Antigua and Barbuda

 

By far the main point of contact between Americans and Antiguans lies in tourism. 66,644 Americans visited Antigua and Barbuda in 2005. Since 2002, the number of visitors has fluctuated between a low of 60,680 in 2002 and a high of 70,531 in 2004. Meanwhile, 20,949 Antiguans visited the U.S. in 2006, 4.9% more than the 19,966 that visited in 2005. The number of visitors has gradually increased every year since 2002, when 16,317 islanders came to the mainland. Both countries host expatriate communities of the other’s citizens. About 4,500 Americans live in Antigua and Barbuda, mainly in the capital of St. John’s, which boasts one of the finest medical schools in the Caribbean, the American University of Antigua College of Medicine, where nearly 500 American students study medicine. All told, 84,343 British West Indians (a category including Antiguans and Barbudans) live in the U.S., many of them students.   
more less
Where Does the Money Flow

 

Antigua and Barbuda’s most important industry is tourism, which contributes 60% of GDP and most of the jobs, with most visitors coming from the U.S. and U.K. In 2007, the U.S. imported $8.7 million of goods from Antigua, including goods being returned to the U.S. after processing, bauxite and aluminum. The U.S. exported more than $240 million of goods to Antigua and Barbuda, mainly petroleum products (20% of the total), machinery and equipment (18%), and food products (9%). 
 
In 2006 the U.S. gave $2 million in aid to Eastern Caribbean countries (i.e., Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines). All of the funding was dedicated to Peace and Security, divided between Foreign Military Financing ($905,000), International Military Education and Training ($695,000), and Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism, and Demining ($404,000). In the 2008 budget, aid decreased to $1.6 million, and was divided between International Military Education and Training ($630,000), International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement ($500,000), and Nonproliferation, Antiterrorism and Demining ($500,000).
more less
Controversies

 

Are U.S. and U.K. Deportations Creating a Crime Explosion in Antigua and Barbuda?
A recent increase in violent crime, highlighted by the July 2008 slaying of a British newlywed couple, has Antiguan Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer laying part of the blame on the U.K. and U.S., for deporting convicted criminals to the island country.  
 
WTO Trade Dispute Over Internet Gambling
In 2003, Antigua and Barbuda filed a complaint against the U.S. with the World Trade Organization (WTO), alleging that the United States’ refusal to allow Internet gambling websites based in Antigua to offer services to American consumers violated free trade agreements signed by both countries. Antigua won its case in 2005, and the countries are still negotiating a final settlement. 
WTO gives Antigua right to violate U.S. copyrights in gambling dispute (by James Kanter and Gary Rivlin, International Herald Tribune)
The Antigua-US WTO Dispute over Internet Gambling (Antigua Online Gambling Association)
more less
Human Rights

 

Antigua and Barbuda is a multiparty parliamentary democracy within the British Commonwealth. The last national elections in 2004 were deemed by observers to be free and fair. While the government generally respects the human rights of its citizens, there are a few problem areas, including excessive use of force by police, poor prison conditions, violation of press freedoms, societal discrimination and violence against women, and sexual abuse of children. In general, while the government tolerates criticism in the press and other media, it occasionally harasses its critics, using both legal and extralegal means. 
more less
Debate
more less
Past Ambassadors

 

The United States does not maintain an Embassy in Antigua and Barbuda. The U.S. embassy in Bridgetown, Barbados, represents U.S. interests throughout the Eastern Caribbean (i.e., Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines).
 
Name: Milan D. Bish
State of Residency: Nebraska
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Dec 11, 1981
Presentation of Credentials: Jan 8, 1982
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown, Mar 4, 1984
 
Name: Thomas H. Anderson, Jr.
State of Residency: Mississippi
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: May 3, 1984
Presentation of Credentials: Aug 16, 1984
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown Mar 12, 1986
 
Name: Paul A. Russo
State of Residency: Virginia
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Oct 14, 1986
Presentation of Credentials: Dec 4, 1986
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown Jun 15, 1988
 
Name: Jeanette W. Hyde
State of Residency: North Carolina
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Mar 4, 1995
Presentation of Credentials: Apr 10, 1995
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown, Jan 31, 1998
 
Name: E. William Crotty
State of Residency: Florida
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Oct 22, 1998
Presentation of Credentials: Jan 19, 1999
Termination of Mission: Died at Gainesville, Florida, Oct 10, 1999
Note: Left Bridgetown Aug 17, 1999
 
Name: James A. Daley
State of Residency: Massachusetts
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Aug 3, 2000
Presentation of Credentials: Oct 24, 2000
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown Mar 1, 2001
Note: Commissioned during a recess of the Senate; a second nomination of Sep 28, 2000, was not acted upon by the Senate.
 
Name: Earl Norfleet Phillips
State of Residency: North Carolina
Non-career appointee
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Jan 30, 2002
Presentation of Credentials: Apr 10, 2002
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown Jun 1, 2003
 
Name: Mary Kramer
State of Residency: Iowa
Non-career officer
Title: Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
Appointment: Dec 15, 2003
Presentation of Credentials: March 30, 2004
Termination of Mission: Left Bridgetown, October 30, 2006
more less
Antigua and Barbuda's Ambassador to the U.S.
ambassador-image Lovell, Deborah-Mae

Deborah-Mae Lovell, a career Antiguan and Barbudan diplomat, presented her credentials as ambassador to the United States on March 8, 2005. Lovell has twenty-five years of experience in the Antigua and Barbuda Foreign Service. She entered the Foreign Service in 1983 as a Third Secretary in the High Commission for Eastern Caribbean States in London. She worked her way through the ranks, holding several positions including Acting High Commissioner in the Antigua and Barbuda office in Ottawa, Canada, where she headed the Mission for three years. She also held the post of Minister Counselor in the Embassy of Antigua and Barbuda in Washington, D.C., as well as in the Permanent Mission of Antigua and Barbuda to the United Nations in New York. Lovell is dually accredited as Ambassador to the United States and as Permanent Representative to the Organization of American States (OAS). 
 

more less
Antigua and Barbuda's Embassy Web Site in the U.S.
more less

Comments

scrapeboxmurah 11 years ago
thanks pro sharing with us, i think this website really stands made known : d. actually informative and kind physique organize of content , currently that's user genial (:.i love your prose type genuinely enjoying this mess leaf . http://scrapeboxmurah.blogspot.com/2012/05/iklan-internet-murah-efektif.html
Ultrabook Notebook Tipis Harga Murah Terbaik 12 years ago
thanks on your marvelous posting! i certainly enjoyed reading it, you are an amazing author.i'll make sure to bookmark your blog and will often come again from now on. http://update-seputar-software.blogspot.com/2011/12/ultrabook-notebook-tipis-harga-murah.html
Software Akuntansi Laporan Keuangan Terbaik 12 years ago
when you have posted it, i was conscious of you have seen on this subject, to provide informational messages to our readers it is really. i hope that you will continue to write this kind of blog. thank you for sharing this information.http://update-seputar-software.blogspot.com/2012/01/software-akuntansi-laporan-keuangan.html

Leave a comment

U.S. Ambassador to Antigua and Barbuda

Ourisman, Mary
ambassador-image

Mary Martin Ourisman served as U.S. ambassador to Barbados and the Eastern Caribbean (Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines) from October 31, 2006, until the end of George W. Bush's term as president.
 
She was born February 1, 1946, in Mexia, Texas. She received a B.S. Degree at the University of Texas at Austin in 1970, and further education in the arts and interior design at the Academy of Arts College in San Francisco and the New York School of Interior Design. President George W. Bush appointed her to the Board of Trustees of the Kennedy Center, where she was a founding member of the Center’s International Committee. She has also served on the Board of Trustees of the Washington National Opera. Ourisman has been a member of the Board of Directors of the Blair House, the President’s guest house for foreign Heads of State and is Emeritus Trustee of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. Extremely active in Republican politics, Ourisman and her husband, car tycoon Mandy Ourisman, donated $443,620 to Republican candidates and committees between 1999 and 2006 alone.

more