 
								PROFILE
								OFFICIAL NAME:
								Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 
								Geography
								
								Area: 340 sq. km. (130 sq. mi.); slightly less 
								than twice the size of Washington, DC. The 
								Grenadines include 32 islands, the largest of 
								which are Bequia, Mustique, Canouan, and Union. 
								Some of the smaller islands are privately owned.
								Cities: Capital--Kingstown. 
								Terrain: Volcanic and mountainous, with the 
								highest peak, Soufriere, rising to 1,219 meters 
								(4,000 ft.).
								Climate: Tropical. 
								People 
								Nationality: Noun and adjective--Vincentian.
								
								Population (2002 est.): 115,000.
								Annual growth rate (1998): 0.1%. 
								Ethnic groups: African descent (66%), mixed 
								(19%), West Indian (6%), Carib Indian (2%).
								Religions: Anglican (47%), Methodist (28%), 
								Roman Catholic (13%), other Protestant 
								denominations, Seventh-day Adventist, Hindu. 
								Language: English (official); some French Patois 
								spoken.
								Education: Literacy--98%. Years 
								compulsory--up to age 15.
								Health (1998): Infant mortality rate--22.2/1,000.
								Life expectancy--females 72 yrs.; 
								males--68 yrs.
								Work force: About 40,000. Agriculture--60%.
								
								Government 
								Type: Parliamentary democracy; independent 
								sovereign state within the Commonwealth.
								Independence: October 27, 1979.
								Constitution: October 27, 1979.
								Branches: Executive--governor general 
								(representing Queen Elizabeth II, head of 
								state), prime minister (head of government), 
								cabinet. Legislative--Unicameral 
								legislature with 15-member elected house of 
								assembly and six-member appointed senate. 
								Judicial--district courts, Eastern Caribbean 
								Supreme Court (high court and court of appeals), 
								final appeal to the Privy Council in London.
								Subdivisions: Six parishes.
								Political parties: Unity Labor Party (ULP, 
								incumbent; holds 12 of 15 seats in parliament), 
								New Democratic Party (NDP).
								Suffrage: Universal at 18. 
								Economy 
								GDP (2004): $409 million.
								GDP real growth (2004): 5.4%.
								Per capita GDP (2004): $3,857.
								Agriculture: 10% of GDP (mostly bananas).
								Natural resources: Timber.
								Industry: Plastic products, food processing, 
								cement, furniture, clothing, starch, and 
								detergents.
								Trade: Exports (2004)--$34 million 
								(bananas, eddoes and dasheen, arrowroot starch).
								Major markets--U.K. 34%, Barbados 13%, 
								St. Lucia 11%, Trinidad 10%. Imports 
								(2004)--$200 million (foodstuffs, machinery and 
								equipment, chemicals and fertilizers). Major 
								suppliers--U.S., CARICOM, U.K., Japan. 
								PEOPLE 
								Most Vincentians are the descendants of African 
								slaves brought to the island to work on 
								plantations. There also are a few white 
								descendants of English colonists, as well as 
								some East Indians, Carib Indians, and a sizable 
								minority of mixed race. The country's official 
								language is English, but a French patois may be 
								heard on some of the Grenadine Islands. St. 
								Vincent has a high rate of emigration along with 
								high unemployment and under-employment. 
								HISTORY
								Carib Indians aggressively prevented 
								European settlement on St. Vincent until the 
								18th century. African slaves--whether 
								shipwrecked or escaped from St. Lucia and 
								Grenada and seeking refuge in St. 
								Vincent--intermarried with the Caribs and became 
								known as "black Caribs." Beginning in 1719, 
								French settlers cultivated coffee, tobacco, 
								indigo, cotton, and sugar on plantations worked 
								by African slaves. In 1763, St. Vincent was 
								ceded to Britain. Restored to French rule in 
								1779, St. Vincent was regained by the British 
								under the Treaty of Versailles in 1783. Conflict 
								between the British and the black Caribs 
								continued until 1796, when General Abercrombie 
								crushed a revolt fomented by the French radical 
								Victor Hugues. More than 5,000 black Caribs were 
								eventually deported to Roatan, an island off the 
								coast of Honduras. 
								Slavery was abolished in 1834; the resulting 
								labor shortages on the plantations attracted 
								Portuguese immigrants in the 1840s and east 
								Indians in the 1860s. Conditions remained harsh 
								for both former slaves and immigrant 
								agricultural workers, as depressed world sugar 
								prices kept the economy stagnant until the turn 
								of the century. 
								From 1763 until independence, St. Vincent 
								passed through various stages of colonial status 
								under the British. A representative assembly was 
								authorized in 1776, Crown Colony government 
								installed in 1877, a legislative council created 
								in 1925, and universal adult suffrage granted in 
								1951. 
								During this period, the British made several 
								unsuccessful attempts to affiliate St. Vincent 
								with other Windward Islands in order to govern 
								the region through a unified administration. The 
								most notable was the West Indies Federation, 
								which collapsed in 1962. St. Vincent was granted 
								associate statehood status in 1969, giving it 
								complete control over its internal affairs. 
								Following a referendum in 1979, St. Vincent and 
								the Grenadines became the last of the Windward 
								Islands to gain independence. Natural disasters 
								have plagued the country throughout the 20th 
								century. 
								In 1902, La Soufriere volcano erupted, 
								killing 2,000 people. Much farmland was damaged, 
								and the economy deteriorated. In April 1979, La 
								Soufriere erupted again. Although no one was 
								killed, thousands had to be evacuated, and there 
								was extensive agricultural damage. In 1980 and 
								1987, hurricanes devastated banana and coconut 
								plantations; 1998 and 1999 also saw very active 
								hurricane seasons, with hurricane Lenny in 1999 
								causing extensive damage to the west coast of 
								the island. 
								GOVERNMENT
								St. Vincent and the Grenadines is a 
								parliamentary democracy within the Commonwealth 
								of Nations. Queen Elizabeth II is head of state 
								and is represented on the island by a governor 
								general, an office with mostly ceremonial 
								functions. Control of the government rests with 
								the prime minister and the cabinet. 
								The parliament is a unicameral body with a 
								15-member elected house of assembly and a 
								six-member appointed senate. The governor 
								general appoints senators, four on the advice of 
								the prime minister and two on the advice of the 
								leader of the opposition. The parliamentary term 
								of office is 5 years, although the prime 
								minister may call elections at any time. 
								As in other English-speaking Caribbean 
								countries, the judiciary in St. Vincent is 
								rooted in British common law. There are 11 
								courts in three magisterial districts. The 
								Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court, comprising a 
								high court and a court of appeals, is known in 
								St. Vincent as the St. Vincent and the 
								Grenadines supreme court. The court of last 
								resort is the judicial committee of Her 
								Majesty's Privy Council in London. 
								There is no local government in St. Vincent, 
								and all six parishes are administered by the 
								central government. 
								Principal Government Officials 
								Head of State--Queen Elizabeth II
								Governor General--Sir Frederick Ballantyne
								Prime Minister--Ralph E. Gonsalves
								Minister of Foreign Affairs and Tourism--Michael 
								Browne
								Ambassador to the U.S. and the OAS--Ellsworth 
								John
								Ambassador to the UN--Margaret Ferrari 
								St. Vincent and the Grenadines maintains an 
								embassy at 3216 New Mexico Ave., NW, Washington, 
								DC 20016 (tel. 202-462-7806). St. Vincent also 
								has a consul resident in New York. 
								POLITICAL CONDITIONS
								The People's Political Party (PPP), founded 
								in 1952 by Ebenezer Joshua, was the first major 
								political party in St. Vincent. The PPP had its 
								roots in the labor movement and was in the 
								forefront of national policy prior to 
								independence, winning elections from 1957 
								through 1966. With the development of a more 
								conservative black middle class, however, the 
								party began to steadily lose support, until it 
								collapsed after a rout in the 1979 elections. 
								The party dissolved itself in 1984. 
								Founded in 1955, the St. Vincent Labor Party 
								(SYLP), under R. Milton Cato, gained the support 
								of the middle class. With a conservative 
								law-and-order message and a pro-Western foreign 
								policy, the SYLP dominated politics from the 
								mid-1960s until the mid-1980s. Following 
								victories in the 1967 and 1974 elections, the 
								SYLP led the island to independence, winning the 
								first post-independence election in 1979. 
								Expecting an easy victory for the SYLP in 1984, 
								Cato called early elections. The results were 
								surprising: with a record 89% voter turnout, 
								James F. Mitchell's New Democratic Party (NDP) 
								won nine seats in the house of assembly. 
								Since the 1984 election, politics in St. 
								Vincent have been dominated by the NDP. 
								Bolstered by a resurgent economy in the 
								mid-1980s, Mitchell led his party to an 
								unprecedented sweep of all 15 house of assembly 
								seats in the 1989 elections. The opposition 
								emerged from the election weakened and 
								fragmented but was able to win three seats 
								during the February 1994 elections under a 
								"unity" coalition. In 1998, Prime Minister 
								Mitchell and the NDP were returned to power for 
								an unprecedented fourth term but only with a 
								slim margin of 8 seats to 7 seats for the Unity 
								Labour Party (ULP). The NDP was able to 
								accomplish a return to power while receiving a 
								lesser share of the popular vote, approximately 
								45% to the ULP's 55%. In March 2001, the ULP, 
								led by Ralph Gonsalves, assumed power after 
								winning 12 of the 15 seats in Parliament. 
								In the December 2005 parliamentary elections, 
								Prime Minister Gonsalves and the ULP retained 
								their 12-3 majority over the NDP.
								ECONOMY
								Bananas account for upwards of 60% of the 
								work force and 50% of merchandise exports in St. 
								Vincent and the Grenadines. Such reliance on one 
								crop makes the economy vulnerable to 
								fluctuations in banana prices and the erosion of 
								European Union trade preferences. To combat 
								these vulnerabilities, the Government of St. 
								Vincent and the Grenadines is focused on 
								diversifying its economy away from reliance on 
								bananas. 
								Although less prominent than in other Eastern 
								Caribbean countries, tourism has grown to become 
								a very important part of the economy, and the 
								chief earner of foreign exchange. The Grenadines 
								have become a favorite of the high-end yachting 
								crowd and the focus of new tourism development 
								in the country. In 1996, new cruise ship and 
								ferry berths came on line, sharply increasing 
								the number of passenger arrivals. In 2004, total 
								visitor arrivals numbered at 160,000. A 
								relatively small number of Americans--under 
								1,000--reside on the islands. 
								St. Vincent and the Grenadines' currency is 
								the Eastern Caribbean dollar (EC$), a regional 
								currency shared among members of the Eastern 
								Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU). The Eastern 
								Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) issues the EC$, 
								manages monetary policy, and regulates and 
								supervises commercial banking activities in its 
								member countries. The ECCB's primary monetary 
								policy goal is to maintain the long-standing 
								currency peg of US$1=EC$2.7.
								St. Vincent and the Grenadines is a 
								beneficiary of the U.S. Caribbean Basin 
								Initiative that grants duty-free entry into the 
								U.S. for many goods. St. Vincent and the 
								Grenadines also belongs to the predominantly 
								English-speaking Caribbean Community and Common 
								Market (CARICOM) and the CARICOM Single Market 
								and Economy (CSME). 
								FOREIGN RELATIONS
								St. Vincent and the Grenadines maintains 
								close ties to the U.S., Canada, and the U.K., 
								and cooperates with regional political and 
								economic organizations such as the Organization 
								of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) and CARICOM. 
								St. Vincent and the Grenadines is a member of 
								the United Nations, the Commonwealth of Nations, 
								the Organization of American States, and the 
								Association of Caribbean States (ACS). 
								As a member of CARICOM, St. Vincent and the 
								Grenadines strongly backed efforts by the United 
								States to implement UN Security Council 
								Resolution 940, designed to facilitate the 
								departure of Haiti's de facto authorities from 
								power. The country agreed to contribute 
								personnel to the multinational force, which 
								restored the democratically elected government 
								of Haiti in October 1994. 
								St. Vincent and the Grenadines maintains 
								close relations with Cuba, which provides a 
								number of scholarship and other exchange 
								programs for Vincentians, particularly in the 
								field of health care. 
								U.S. -ST. VINCENT RELATIONS 
								The United States and St. Vincent have solid 
								bilateral relations. Both governments are 
								concerned with eradicating local marijuana 
								cultivation and combating the transshipment of 
								narcotics. The St. Vincentian Government has 
								generally been cooperative and responsive to 
								U.S. offers of assistance. In 1995, the U.S. and 
								St. Vincent signed a maritime law enforcement 
								agreement. In 1996, the Government of St. 
								Vincent and the Grenadines signed an extradition 
								treaty with the United States. In 1997, the two 
								countries signed a mutual legal assistance 
								treaty. 
								The United States supports the Government of 
								St. Vincent and the Grenadines' efforts to 
								expand its economic base and to provide a higher 
								standard of living for its citizens. U.S. 
								assistance is channeled primarily through 
								multilateral agencies such as the World Bank. 
								The United States has about 31
								Peace 
								Corps volunteers in St. Vincent working 
								in education and health. The U.S. military also 
								provides assistance through exercise-related 
								construction and humanitarian civic action 
								projects. 
								Principal U.S. Embassy Officials 
								Ambassador--Mary 
								E. Kramer
								Deputy Chief of Mission--Mary Ellen T. Gilroy
								Political/Economic Counselor--Sheila Peters
								Consul General--Clyde Howard Jr.
								Regional Labor Attaché--Alfred Anzaldua
								Economic-Commercial Affairs--John Ashworth
								Public Affairs Officer--Julie O'Reagan
								Peace Corps Director--Terry Armstrong 
								The United States maintains no official 
								presence in St. Vincent. The ambassador and 
								embassy officers are resident in Barbados and 
								frequently travel to St. Vincent. 
								The
								
								U.S. Embassy in Barbados is located in 
								the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Building, 
								Broad Street, Bridgetown (tel: 246-436-4950; 
								fax: 246-429-5246).