Barbuda Now a ‘Net Contributor’ After Decades of Underdevelopment, Governor General Says

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Photo Caption: Pictured during the ribbon-cutting for the BIA are: Chairman of the Board for the Antigua and Barbuda Airport Authority Rolston Potter, Project President PLH Justin Wilshaw, Antigua and Barbuda Airport Authority CEO Wendy Francette-Williams, Minister of Tourism, Civil Aviation, Transportation and Investment The Hon. Charles Fernandez, H.E. Lady Sandra Williams and Governor General of Antigua and Barbuda H.E. Sir Rodney Williams, Minister for Housing, Lands, and Urban Renewal The Hon. Maria Browne, Prime Minister Antigua and Barbuda The Hon. Gaston Browne, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Barbuda Affairs The Hon. E.P. Chet Greene, and Former Barbudan MP Arthur Nibbs, whose contributions to the development of Barbuda will be recognised in the naming of the new Barbuda International Airport.

Barbuda has moved from chronic underdevelopment to becoming a net contributor to the national economy, Governor General Sir Rodney Williams declared Thursday as he delivered the Throne Speech at the opening of Parliament.

Sir Rodney said Barbuda had remained “a diamond in the rough for more than 60 years,” but that a series of major investments since 2014 had reversed its economic trajectory. He highlighted new hospitality projects—including PLH, Rosewood, Louie Hill and Nobu—as well as paved roadways, street lighting and new public infrastructure.

According to the Governor General, these developments “have begun to transform Barbuda into net-contributor status,” something he noted had never occurred since the creation of the Barbuda Council.

He also pointed to the island’s new international airport as a major part of that turnaround. Calling it “a new International Burton-Nibbs Airport,” Sir Rodney said it would be followed by “a new seaport capable of receiving container ships, new roads, new green energy plants, new freshwater-producing sources, and new housing stock in the aftermath of Hurricane Irma.”

A significant portion of the transformation, he said, came from long-delayed reforms to land tenure. Sir Rodney stated that by repealing the 2007 law and replacing it with “a just and fair law that would provide title to those who have dwelled on plots of land for generations,” the government ended an “injustice which previous administrations feared to change.”

He noted that the nation’s apex court had ruled definitively that “all land not privately owned in Antigua and Barbuda is the Crown’s,” a decision he said cleared the way for more secure investment and development.

Sir Rodney said the progress was the result of “an unrelenting vision of a better Barbuda,” crediting the persistence of national leadership in pursuing long-stalled reforms.

With additional projects on the horizon—including the planned seaport—Sir Rodney said the transformation already underway is positioning Barbuda for sustained economic contribution for the first time in its modern history.

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6 COMMENTS

  1. Finally! Dem lazy, good for nothing, ignorant, backward libba need fu tap LEECH off of Antigua!!!

    Big up GASTON BROWNE ADMINISTRATION 🚩🚩🚩

  2. I would like to remind the public that before any PLH, Nobu and those that have been mentioned , there was the Barbuda Cottages and The Famous Barbuda Belle. These 2 establishments never get publicity, . They are family owned and have been contributing much more than anyone of the bigger establishments.

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