Antigua envoy says links to the US ‘long, strong’

Antigua envoy says links to the US ‘long, strong’
Gov’t of Antigua and Barbuda

Antigua and Barbuda Ambassador to the United States, Sir Ronald Sanders, says the links between the United States and his are “long, strong and enduring.”

In addressing a church service at the Holy Comforter Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, marking the 36th anniversary of Antigua and Barbuda’s independence, Sir Ronald observed that the links between the two countries “existed before the independence of the United States from Britain in 1776,” according to a statement from the government of Antigua and Barbuda.

“Antigua always was, and remains today, a strong trading partner with the United States,” he said. “Evidence of the commitment to those trade links was Antigua’s resistance to British Navigation Acts that sought to punish the United States after 1776 by prohibiting trade with its colonies in the Caribbean.

Between 1784 and 1787, it took Horatio Nelson and a fleet of British military ships to enforce Antigua’s refusal to comply with the trade embargo against the newly-independent United States of America”, he added. “Nelson is recorded as saying that the Antiguan colonists are as great rebels as ever were in America, had they the power to show it.”

Like many other nations in the Caribbean, Sanders said Antigua’s desire for independence was inspired by the United American States, stating that he noble ideas, expounded by Thomas Jefferson and John Dickinson in 1775 “resounded across those many centuries,” including that Americans were “resolved to die freemen rather than to live as slaves.”

He said that “it is no passing coincidence that 36 years ago, the framers of the Independence Constitution of Antigua and Barbuda, laid down similar principles to those set out in the United States Declaration of Independence, especially that all men are entitled to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

Declaring that the harmful effects of climate change is now the biggest threat to the independence and existence of Antigua and Barbuda, Sir Ronald told congregants “this is why Antigua and Barbuda has to be in the forefront of the battle against climate change.

“We may be bowed, but we are not beaten,” he said. “We were knocked-down many times and still we stood up every time.”

Sanders said the government and people of Antigua and Barbuda “intend to continue to rise”, adding, “We will stretch our hands to our sisters and brothers in this United States diaspora, so that we might lift-up ourselves together, because, in the words of the old spiritual, “We all got a right to the tree of life.”