home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
- BACKGROUND NOTES: GRENADA
- PUBLISHED BY THE BUREAU OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS
- NOVEMBER 1994
-
- Official Name: Grenada
-
- PROFILE
-
- Geography
- Area: 344 sq. km. (133 sq. mi.); about twice the size of Washington,
- DC.
- Cities: Capital--St. George's (est.
- pop. 30,000).
- Terrain: Volcanic island with mountainous rainforest.
- Climate: Tropical.
-
- People
- Nationality: Noun and adjective--Grenadian(s).
- Population (est.): 94,000; 50% under age 30.
- Annual growth rate: 0.6%.
- Ethnic groups: Mainly black African descent (82%), few East Indian, few
- European, trace Arawak/Carib Indian.
- Religions: Roman Catholic, Church of England, other Protestant
- denominations.
- Languages: English (official).
- Education: Years compulsory--6. Literacy--90% of adult population.
- Health: Infant mortality rate--17/1,000. Life expectancy--68 yrs.
- Work force (1993): 35,000. Agriculture--33%. Industry--17%. Other--
- 50%.
-
- Government
- Type: Westminster-style parliamentary system.
- Independence: February 7, 1974.
- Constitution: December 19, 1975.
- Branches: Executive--governor general (appointed by and represents
- British monarch, head of state); prime minister (head of government,
- leader of majority party) and cabinet direct an apolitical career civil
- service in the administration of the government. Legislative--
- parliament composed of 15 directly elected members in the House of
- Representatives and a 13-seat Senate appointed by the governor general
- on the advice of the majority party and opposition. Judicial--Supreme
- Court, composed of the High Court of Justice and a Court of Appeals;
- magistrates for misdemeanors.
- Subdivisions: Six parishes and one dependency.
- Political parties: National Democratic Congress (NDC), The National
- Party (TNP), New National Party (NNP), Grenada United Labor Party
- (GULP), Maurice Bishop Patriotic Movement (MBPM), Initiative for Better
- Government (IBR), and New Republican Party (NRP).
- Suffrage: Universal at 18.
-
- Economy (1993)
- GDP: $174 million.
- Annual growth rate: 0.7%.
- Per capita GDP: $1,800.
- Agriculture: Products--bananas, nutmeg, mace, cocoa, other fruits,
- vegetables.
- Industry: Types--manufacturing, hotel/restaurant, construction.
- Trade: Exports--$19.8 million: bananas, nutmeg, mace, cocoa, other
- fruits, vegetables. Major markets--U.K. 26%, U.S. 25%, CARICOM
- countries 17%, Germany 14%, Netherlands 10%. Imports--$177 million:
- food, machinery and transport, manufactured goods, fuel. Major
- suppliers--U.S. 26%, CARICOM countries 21%, U.K. 16%, Japan 6%.
- Official exchange rate: Eastern Caribbean dollar (EC) $2.70=U.S. $1.
-
-
- PEOPLE
-
- Most of Grenada's population is of African descent; there is little
- trace of the early Arawak and Carib Indians. A few East Indians and a
- small community of the descendants of early European settlers reside in
- Grenada. Population is about 94,000. About 50% of Grenada's population
- are under the age of 30. English is the official language; only a few
- people still speak a French patois. A more significant reminder of
- Grenada's historical link with France is the strength of the Roman
- Catholic Church, to which about 60% of Grenadians belong. The Church of
- England is the largest Protestant denomination.
-
-
- HISTORY
-
- Before the arrival of Europeans, Grenada was inhabited by Carib Indians
- who had driven the more peaceful Arawaks from the island. Columbus
- landed on Grenada in 1498 during his third voyage to the New World. He
- named the island "Concepcion." The origin of the name "Grenada" is
- obscure. Legend has it that the Spanish renamed the island for the city
- of Granada. By the beginning of the 18th century, the name "Grenada"
- was in common use.
-
- Partly because of the Caribs, Grenada remained uncolonized for more than
- 100 years after its discovery; British efforts to settle the island were
- unsuccessful. In 1650, a French company founded by Cardinal Richelieu
- purchased Grenada from the British and established a small settlement.
- After several skirmishes with the Caribs, the French brought in
- reinforcements from Martinique and slaughtered the entire Indian
- population.
-
- The island remained under French control until its capture by the
- British a century later, during the Seven Years' War. Grenada was
- formally ceded to Great Britain in 1763 by the Treaty of Paris.
- Although the French regained control in 1779, the island was restored to
- Great Britain in 1783 by the Treaty of Versailles.
-
- During the 18th century, Grenada's economy underwent an important
- transition. Like much of the rest of the West Indies, it was originally
- settled to cultivate sugar, which was grown on estates using slave
- labor. But natural disasters paved the way for the introduction of
- other crops. In 1782, Sir Joseph Banks, the botanical adviser to King
- George III, introduced nutmeg to Grenada. The island's soil was ideal
- for growing the spice, and, because Grenada was a closer source of
- spices for Europe than the Dutch East Indies, the island assumed a new
- importance to European traders. The collapse of the sugar estates and
- the introduction of nutmeg and cocoa encouraged the development of
- smaller land holdings. The island developed a land-owning yeoman farmer
- class; slavery was outlawed in 1833.
-
- In 1833, Grenada was made part of the British Windward Islands
- Administration. The governor of the Windward Islands administered the
- island for the rest of the colonial period. In 1958, the Windward
- Islands Administration was dissolved, and Grenada joined the Federation
- of the West Indies. After that federation collapsed in 1962, the
- British Government tried to form a small federation out of its remaining
- dependencies in the Eastern Caribbean.
-
- Following the failure of this second effort, the British and the islands
- developed the concept of associated statehood. Under the Associated
- Statehood Act of 1967, six British dependencies in the Eastern Caribbean
- (Grenada, St. Vincent, St. Lucia, Dominica, Antigua, and St. Kitts-
- Nevis-Anguilla) were granted full autonomy over their internal affairs.
- Great Britain retained responsibility for their defense and external
- affairs. Grenada became an associated state on March 3, 1967, but
- sought full independence, which the British Government granted on
- February 7, 1974.
-
- After obtaining independence, Grenada adopted a modified Westminster
- parliamentary system based on the British model, with a governor general
- appointed by and representing the British monarch (head of state) and a
- prime minister who is both leader of the majority party and the head of
- government. Sir Eric Gairy was Grenada's first Prime Minister.
-
- On March 13, 1979, the New Joint Endeavor for Welfare, Education, and
- Liberation (New Jewel) Movement ousted Gairy in a nearly bloodless coup
- and established a People's Revolutionary Government (PRG), headed by
- Maurice Bishop, who became Prime Minister. His Marxist-Leninist
- government moved to establish close ties to Cuba, the Soviet Union, and
- other communist-bloc countries.
-
- In October 1983, a power struggle within the government resulted in the
- arrest and subsequent execution of Prime Minister Bishop and several
- members of his cabinet by elements of the People's Revolutionary Army.
- Following a breakdown in civil order, a multilateral, joint U.S.-
- Caribbean force landed on Grenada on October 25 in response to an appeal
- from the governor general and to a request for assistance from the
- Organization of Eastern Caribbean States. U.S. citizens were evacuated,
- and order was restored.
-
- An advisory council, named by the governor general, administered the
- country until general elections were held in December 1984. The New
- National Party (NNP), led by Herbert Blaize, won 14 out of 15 seats in
- free and fair elections and formed a democratic government. Grenada's
- constitution had been suspended in 1979 by the PRG, but it was restored
- after the 1984 elections.
-
- The NNP continued in power until 1989 but with a reduced majority. Five
- NNP parliamentary members--including two cabinet ministers--left the
- party in 1986-87 and formed the National Democratic Congress (NDC),
- which became the official opposition.
-
- In August 1989, Prime Minister Blaize broke with the NNP to form another
- new party--The National Party (TNP)--from the ranks of the NNP. This
- split in the NNP resulted in the formation of a minority government with
- TNP controlling only six seats in the parliament. Shortly thereafter,
- the Prime Minister suspended the parliament pending constitutionally
- scheduled elections to be held in March 1990. Prime Minister Blaize
- died in December 1989 and was succeeded as Prime Minister by Ben Jones
- until after the elections.
-
- The NDC emerged from the 1990 elections as the strongest party, winning
- seven of the 15 available seats. Nicholas Brathwaite added two TNP
- members and one GULP member to create a 10-seat majority coalition. The
- governor general appointed him to be Prime Minister.
-
-
- GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
-
- Grenada is governed under a parliamentary system based on the British
- model; it has a governor general, a prime minister and cabinet, and a
- bicameral parliament with an elected House of Representatives and an
- appointed Senate.
-
- As part of its 1985 restoration of the constitution, the parliament
- legitimized the court system inherited from its predecessors, who had
- ruled by decree. Political and civil rights are fully guaranteed by the
- government.
-
- Grenada's political parties range from the moderate TNP, NNP, and NDC to
- the Marxist Maurice Bishop Patriotic Movement (MBPM--organized by the
- pro-Bishop survivors of the October 1983 anti-Bishop coup) and the
- populist GULP of former Prime Minister Gairy.
-
- National Security
-
- Security in Grenada is maintained by the 650 members of the Royal
- Grenada Police Force (RGPF), which includes an 80-member paramilitary
- special services unit (SSU) and a 30-member coast guard unit. The U.S.
- Army and the U.S. Coast Guard provide periodic training for the SSU and
- the coast guard.
-
- Principal Government Officials
- Head of State--Queen Elizabeth II
- Governor General--Sir Reginald Palmer
- Prime Minister and Minister of External Affairs, National Security, Home
- Affairs, and Carriacou and Petit Martinique Affairs--Nicholas Brathwaite
- Ambassador to the United States--Denneth Modeste
-
- Grenada maintains an embassy in the United States at 1701 New Hampshire
- Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20009 (tel. 202-265-2561).
-
-
- ECONOMY
-
- Economic growth in 1993 was modest (0.7%) in spite of a strong
- performance by the tourism sector, which grew by 15%. GDP for 1993 was
- $174 million. Grenada's exports declined for the year; domestic exports
- were $15.8 mil-lion, and re-exported products accounted for $3.9
- million. At $177 million, Grenada's imports were nine times the level
- of its exports. The U.S. was the country's largest supplier, providing
- 26% of all imports.
-
- Grenada is a member of the Caribbean Community and Common Market
- (CARICOM). Most goods can be imported into Grenada under open general
- license, but some goods require specific licenses. Goods that are
- produced in the Eastern Caribbean get additional protection; in May
- 1991, the CARICOM Common External Tariff (CET) was implemented. The CET
- aims to facilitate economic growth through intra-regional trade by
- offering duty-free trade among CARICOM members and duties on goods
- imported from outside CARICOM. Among the types of surcharges and other
- levies that can be assessed on imports, a value added tax (VAT)--which
- ranges from 5%-52%--is the largest. Certain goods and services, such as
- basic foodstuffs, are exempted from VAT. Combined duties and levies on
- U.S. imports range from zero on essential goods and raw materials to
- about 100% for some luxury goods.
-
- Tourism accounted for 27% of the country's 1993 GDP. Based on the
- opening of two large hotels in December 1993, the sector is expected to
- grow by another 25% in 1994. Americans are the largest group of
- tourists, representing about one out of every three visitors.
-
- Grenada's agriculture grew slightly in real terms from 1992-93 and
- contributed 14% to 1993 GDP. For 1992-93, the country's manufacturing
- (5% of 1993 GDP) fell slightly in real terms. The major causes of
- manufacturing's decline were critical shortages of water and electricity
- in industrial areas. Manufacturing for domestic consumption faced
- strong competition from imported products, mostly because of CARICOM's
- lowered tariffs. High wages relative to other Caribbean producers
- lowered some companies' productivity.
-
-
- FOREIGN RELATIONS
-
- The United States, Venezuela, and Taiwan have embassies in Grenada. The
- Government of the United Kingdom is represented by a resident
- commissioner (as opposed to the governor general, who represents the
- British monarch). Grenada has been recognized by most members of the
- United Nations and maintains diplomatic missions in the United Kingdom,
- the United States, Venezuela, and Canada.
-
- Grenada is a member of the Caribbean Development Bank, CARICOM, the
- Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS), and the British
- Commonwealth. It joined the United Nations in 1974, and the World Bank,
- the International Monetary Fund, and the Organization of American States
- in 1975.
-
- As a member of CARICOM, Grenada 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.
-
-
- U.S.-GRENADIAN RELATIONS
-
- The U.S. Government established an embassy in Grenada in November 1983.
- The ambassador for Grenada also is accredited to Barbados and is
- resident in Bridgetown, Barbados. The embassy in Grenada is to be
- staffed by a principal officer who reports to the ambassador in
- Bridgetown.
-
- The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has played a major
- role in Grenada's development, providing more than $120 million in
- economic assistance. About 30 Peace Corps volunteers in Grenada teach
- remedial reading. Some U.S. military training is given to Grenadian
- security and defense forces.
-
- Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
- Ambassador-designate--Jeanette W. Hyde
- Principal Officer--vacant
-
- The U.S. embassy in Grenada is located on Maurice Bishop Highway, Point
- Salines, St. George's, Grenada (tel: 809-444-1173; fax: 809-444-4820).
- The mailing address is P.O. Box 54, St. George's, Grenada, West Indies.
-
- (###)
-
-
-