On the verge of freeing itself from its subjection to the British Crown, the young republic of Barbados will have to deal with the economic impact of the pandemic on its tourism and the inequalities inherited from its colonial past.
Known for its paradisiacal beaches, Barbados will induct on Tuesday President Sandra Mason, elected by indirect universal suffrage, as Head of State, replacing British Queen Elisabeth II.
The celebrations for this historic transition to Republican rule, which include parties and military parades, will begin Monday evening in the presence of Prince Charles, heir to the British crown.
The rise of a republic in this independent Caribbean micro-state since 1966 followed years of local campaigning and rekindled debates over centuries of British influence, marked by 200 years of slavery.
The consequences of colonization still visible
“As a young girl, when I heard about the Queen, I was very excited,” recalls Sharon Bellamy-Thompson, 50, who saw as a child Elisabeth II visiting the island. . “Growing up, I started to wonder what this queen really meant to me and my country. It didn't make any sense, ”says the fish seller in the capital Bridgetown. “Having a Barbadian woman president will be great,” she continues.
For some activists, like Firhaana Bulbulia, founder of the Barbados Muslim Association, British colonization and slavery are directly responsible for the inequalities on the island.
"The differences in wealth, the ability to own property, even access to bank loans, all of this is linked to the structures created under British rule", argues the young woman of 26 years.
“The physical chains of slavery have been broken and we no longer wear them, but the mental chains persist in our minds,” she says.
16% unemployment after the Covid-19 crisis
Barbados held its first ever presidential election in October, 13 months after the announcement of the constitutional divorce from the British Crown. But some residents point to the existence of more urgent problems, including the economic crisis caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, which exposed the country's dependence on tourism, especially from the United Kingdom.
Before the virus emerged, the crystal-clear island was visited by more than a million people every year.
The calm of the usually busy streets of Bridgetown, the paltry number of visitors and a dying nightlife today testify to the difficulties of this pearl of the Lesser Antilles, which has about 287,000 inhabitants.
Unemployment is nearly 16%, up 9% from previous years, despite increased government borrowing to finance public sector works and create jobs.
A princely invitation criticized
The country has just eased certain anti-Covid health measures, such as the curfew in force, which went from 9 p.m. to midnight. "The increase in the number of Covid infections, and the rise of a feeling of anxiety and fear - I do not think this is the right time", to organize celebrations, deplores the leader of the opposition, the Bishop Joseph Atherley.
Critics also target the invitation of Prince Charles by the Barbadian Prime Minister, Mia Mottley, who is to give him the highest honor on the island, the Order of Freedom.
"The British royal family is guilty of exploitation in this area, and yet they have offered no official apology or form of compensation for past wrongs," said Kristina Hinds, professor of international relations at the University of the West Indies. in Barbados.
“So I don't understand how someone from the royal family can receive this award.
It's beyond me, ”she adds.
The example of Dominica and Trinidad and Tobago
The end of Elizabeth II's sovereignty over Barbados is thus seen by some as a crucial step towards financial reparations for the historical consequences of the slave trade, brought from Africa to work on the sugar plantations. For others, it's simply a way of being in tune with what locals have wanted for many years.
A number of countries have since their independence chosen to withdraw the position of head of state from the Queen of England, such as Guyana (1970), Trinidad and Tobago (1976) and Dominica (1978).
But she remains the sovereign of Canada or Australia.
"It's a very good thing that we are becoming a republic, because we've been independent for 55 years now and it's time to show that we can do it on our own," says Derry Bailey, 33. , owner of a water sports equipment rental business.
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