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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Hurricane-hit Antigua and Barbuda to vote early
by Staff Writers
Georgetown, Guyana (AFP) Feb 25, 2018

Antigua and Barbuda, a hurricane-ravaged Caribbean tourist destination, will go to the polls next month more than a year earlier than scheduled, the prime minister said on Saturday.

The two-island nation's parliamentary elections were scheduled for June 2019, but will now be held on March 21, Gaston Browne said.

Voters will select the 17 members of Antigua and Barbuda's House of Representatives, its lower house. Members of the Senate are appointed.

"Our primary focus for calling elections early is not about politics but is about your development. God forbid for there to be change in government," Browne said on radio.

After a 10-year hiatus, voters returned Browne's Labor Party to power during the last ballot in 2014, when he pledged to economically transform the country.

On Saturday, Browne said there had been "significant gains" since and that the government wanted to guard against unpredictability in the investment climate.

He cited cheaper housing for ordinary people, better roads, two Marriott-branded hotels, as well as a new airport on the island of Barbuda, which was battered last year by Hurricane Irma.

On its path through the Caribbean in September, Irma caused "absolute devastation" on Barbuda where up to 30 percent of properties were demolished, and 95 percent damaged, Browne had said at the time.

Labor has ruled Antigua and Barbuda almost continuously since 1949. The country became fully independent from Britain in 1981.


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DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands face painful hurricane recovery: NY Fed
New York (AFP) Feb 22, 2018
The US territories of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands will need to take painful actions to restore their economies amid the hurricane devastation, New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley said Thursday. The island territories, especially Puerto Rico, already faced dire economic realities even before hurricanes slammed into them late last summer, but the recovery now is complicated by shrinking populations, high debt, high unemployment and plunging growth, Dudley said. "Puerto Rico no ... read more

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