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Bank account and ATM Bank Card in Saint
Vincent & The Grenadines
A bit of information about St
Vincent & The Grenadines

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is an independent nation that is well
known for its democratic system of Government. Elections are held every
five years.
It is a full member of the British Commonwealth, the United Nations, the
Organization of American States, the International Labor Organization,
CARICOM, and the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States.
St. Vincent and the Grenadines in the Caribbean

St. Vincent and the Grenadines, is an independent state in the
south-eastern Caribbean Sea, consisting of the island of St Vincent and
the 32 northernmost islands.
St. Vincent is blessed with lush mountains, volcanic-rich soil and
unspoiled landscapes of brilliant flora and beautiful crystal clear
waters.
St.Vincent and the Grenadines was discovered by Columbus in 1498. This
multi-island state became independent on October 27, 1979.
It is a full member of the British Commonwealth, the United Nations, the
Organization of American States, the International Labour Organization,
Caricom, and the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States. The main city
and financial center, Kingstown, is situated on St. Vincent Island.
Each island is very individual in style and appeal unspoiled with
irresistible white sand beaches, warm clear seas and remoteness from the
pressures of life.
St.Vincent and the Grenadines on the world map.

In 1996, the government of
St. Vincent and the Grenadines created the new International Financial
Services Authority and enacted a set of laws that not only reflect the
best elements of modern international legislation, but also accept the
reality of today's information technology.
There are up-to-date laws governing International Business Companies,
International Banks and International Trusts, as well as a law ensuring
proper preservation of confidential relationships in financial services.
For the international client, whether corporate or private, St. Vincent
offers a politically stable, secure and modern environment in which to
do business.
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
 |
Woman wearing
a traditional West Indian dress participates
in welcoming ceremony in Kingstown, Saint
Vincent, September 29, 2005. [© AP Images] |
Nationality:
Noun and adjective--Vincentian.
Population (2008): 118,000.
Annual growth rate (2006): 0.5%.
Ethnic groups: African descent (66%), mixed (19%),
West Indian (6%), Carib Indian (2%), other (7%).
Religions: Anglican (47%), Methodist (28%), Roman
Catholic (13%), other Protestant denominations,
Seventh-day Adventist, and Hindu.
Language: English (official); some French Patois
spoken.
Education (2004): Adult literacy--88.1%.
Health (2006): Infant mortality rate--17/1,000.
Life expectancy--men 69 years; women 74
years.
Workforce (2006): 57,695.
Unemployment (2004): 12%.
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 Labour Party (ULP,
incumbent), New Democratic Party (NDP).
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Economy
GDP (2006): $422.5 million.
GDP growth (2005): 4.9%.
Per capita GDP (2005): $3,594.
Inflation (2006): 3.0%.
Natural resources: Timber.
Agriculture: Mostly bananas.
Industry: Plastic products, food processing, cement,
furniture, clothing, starch, and detergents.
Trade (2005): Exports--$40 million
(merchandise) and $155 million (commercial
services). Major markets--European Union
(27.2%), Barbados (12.7%), Trinidad and Tobago
(12.3%), Saint Lucia (10.9%), and the United States
(9.2%). Imports--$240 million (merchandise)
and $74 million (commercial services). Major
suppliers--United States (33.3%), Trinidad and
Tobago (23.6%), European Union (15.1%), Japan
(4.2%), and Barbados (3.9%).
Official exchange rate: EC$2.70 = U.S. $1.
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.
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, the 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, consisting of 15 elected members
and six appointed senators. 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 five
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, Commerce, and
Trade--Sir Louis Straker
Ambassador to the United States and the OAS--La
Celia Prince
Permanent Representative to the UN--Camillo
Gonsalves
St. Vincent and the
Grenadines maintains an embassy at 3216 New Mexico
Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20016 (tel. 202-364-6730).
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 lose
support steadily, until it collapsed after a rout in
the 1979 elections. The party dissolved itself in
1984.
Founded in 1955,
the St. Vincent Labour Party (SVLP), 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 SVLP dominated politics from the
mid-1960s until the mid-1980s. Following victories
in the 1967 and 1974 elections, the SVLP led the
island to independence, winning the first
post-independence election in 1979. Expecting an
easy victory for the SVLP 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.
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
Banana production employs
upwards of 60% of the work force and accounts for
50% of merchandise exports in St. Vincent and the
Grenadines, with an emphasis on the main island of
St. Vincent. Such reliance on one crop has made the
economy vulnerable to fluctuations in banana prices
and reduced 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. Recently, there has been a parallel
reduction in licit agriculture and a rise in
marijuana cultivation, making St. Vincent and the
Grenadines the largest marijuana producer in the
Eastern Caribbean.
In contrast to
developments on the main island, tourism in the
Grenadines has grown to become a very important part
of the economy, and the chief earner of foreign
exchange for the country as a whole. The Grenadines
have become a favorite of high-end tourism and the
focus of new development in the country.
Super-luxury resorts, yachting tourism, and a
commitment by the government to rehabilitate and
protect the Tobago Keys as a national park have all
contributed to strong tourism returns in the
Grenadines.
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$, manages monetary policy, and regulates and
supervises commercial banking activities in its
member countries. The ECCB has kept the EC$ pegged
at EC$2.7=U.S. $1.
St. Vincent and the
Grenadines is a beneficiary of the U.S. Caribbean
Basin Initiative that grants duty-free entry into
the United States 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 United
States, Canada, and the United Kingdom, and is a
member of regional political and economic
organizations such as the Organization of Eastern
Caribbean States (OECS) and CARICOM. St. Vincent and
the Grenadines is also a member of the United
Nations, the Commonwealth of Nations, the
Organization of American States (OAS), and the
Association of Caribbean States (ACS). St. Vincent
and the Grenadines has chosen to recognize Taiwan
instead of the People's Republic of China.
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. In 1995, the United
States 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 U.S. military also provides assistance
through construction and humanitarian civic action
projects.
A relatively small
number of Americans--fewer than 1,000--reside on the
islands.
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.
Principal
U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--vacant
Deputy Chief of Mission--D. Brent Hardt
Political/Economic Chief--Ian Campbell
Consul General--Nicole Theriot
Regional Labor Attaché--Jake Aller
Commercial Affairs--Ian Campbell
Public Affairs Officer--John Roberts
Peace Corps Director--Margo Jean-Child (resident in
St. Lucia)
The
U.S. Embassy in Barbados is located in the
Wildey Business Park, Wildey, St. Michael (tel:
246-436-4950; fax: 246-429-5246).
Other
Contact Information
International Trade Administration
U.S. Department of Commerce
1401 Constitution Ave NW
Washington, DC 20230
Tel: 1-800-USA-TRADE
http://trade.gov/
Caribbean/Latin
American Action
1818 N Street, NW, Suite 310
Washington, DC 20036
Tel: (202) 466-7464
Fax: (202) 822-0075
TRAVEL AND
BUSINESS INFORMATION
The U.S. Department of State's Consular Information
Program advises Americans traveling and residing
abroad through Country Specific Information, Travel
Alerts, and Travel Warnings. Country Specific
Information exists for all countries and
includes information on entry and exit requirements,
currency regulations, health conditions, safety and
security, crime, political disturbances, and the
addresses of the U.S. embassies and consulates
abroad. Travel Alerts are issued to
disseminate information quickly about terrorist
threats and other relatively short-term conditions
overseas that pose significant risks to the security
of American travelers. Travel Warnings are
issued when the State Department recommends that
Americans avoid travel to a certain country because
the situation is dangerous or unstable.
For the latest
security information, Americans living and traveling
abroad should regularly monitor the Department's
Bureau of Consular Affairs Internet web site at
http://www.travel.state.gov, where the current
Worldwide Caution,
Travel Alerts, and
Travel Warnings can be found.
Consular Affairs Publications, which contain
information on obtaining passports and planning a
safe trip abroad, are also available at
http://www.travel.state.gov. For additional
information on international travel, see
http://www.usa.gov/Citizen/Topics/Travel/International.shtml.
The Department of
State encourages all U.S. citizens traveling or
residing abroad to register via the
State Department's travel registration website
or at the nearest U.S. embassy or consulate abroad.
Registration will make your presence and whereabouts
known in case it is necessary to contact you in an
emergency and will enable you to receive up-to-date
information on security conditions.
Emergency
information concerning Americans traveling abroad
may be obtained by calling 1-888-407-4747 toll free
in the U.S. and Canada or the regular toll line
1-202-501-4444 for callers outside the U.S. and
Canada.
The
National Passport Information Center (NPIC) is
the U.S. Department of State's single, centralized
public contact center for U.S. passport information.
Telephone: 1-877-4-USA-PPT (1-877-487-2778);
TDD/TTY: 1-888-874-7793. Passport information is
available 24 hours, 7 days a week. You may speak
with a representative Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 10
p.m., Eastern Time, excluding federal holidays.
Travelers can check
the latest health information with the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta,
Georgia. A hotline at 800-CDC-INFO (800-232-4636)
and a web site at
http://wwwn.cdc.gov/travel/default.aspx give the
most recent health advisories, immunization
recommendations or requirements, and advice on food
and drinking water safety for regions and countries.
The CDC publication "Health Information for
International Travel" can be found at
http://wwwn.cdc.gov/travel/contentYellowBook.aspx.
Source:
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2345.htm

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