Country facts:
| Flag: |
 |
| Area: |
5,128 sq km |
| Population: |
1,088,644 |
| Languages: |
English (official), Hindi, French, Spanish, Chinese |
| Currency: |
Trinidad and Tobago dollar (TTD) |
| Climate: |
tropical; rainy season (June to December) |
Trinidad & Tobago
Trinidad & Tobago country information
Geography
Trinidad and Tobago lie in the Caribbean Sea off the northeast coast of
Venezuela. Trinidad, the larger at 1,864 sq mi (4,828 sq km), is mainly
flat and rolling, with mountains in the north that reach a height of
3,085 ft (940 m) at Mount Aripo. Tobago, at just 116 sq mi (300 sq km),
is heavily forested with hardwood trees.
Government
Parliamentary democracy.
History
When Trinidad was explored by Columbus in 1498, it was inhabited by the
Arawaks; Carib Indians inhabited Tobago. Trinidad remained in Spanish
possession, despite raids by other European nations, until it was ceded
to Britain in 1802. Tobago passed between Britain and France several
times, but it was ultimately given to Britain in 1814. Slavery was
abolished in 1834. Between 1845 and 1917, thousands of indentured
workers were brought from India to work on sugarcane plantations. In
1889 Trinidad and Tobago were made a single colony.
Partial self-government was instituted in 1925, and from 1958 to 1962
the nation was part of the West Indies Federation. On Aug. 31, 1962, it
became independent and on Aug. 1, 1976, Trinidad and Tobago became a
republic, remaining within the Commonwealth. While the country is a
stable democracy and enjoys the highest living standards in the
Caribbean thanks to oil revenue, tension between East Indians and
blacks has underlined much of political life. In 1970 rioting and an
army mutiny against the East Indian population prompted a state of
emergency, which lasted for two years. Eric Williams, ?Father of the
Nation? and leader of the People's National Movement (PNM), which is
largely supported by blacks, governed from 1956 until his death in
1981. In Dec. 1986 the multiracial National Alliance for Reconstruction
(NAR), based in Tobago, won a parliamentary majority, promising to sell
most state-owned companies, reorganize the civil service, and reduce
dependence on oil.
In 1990, to protest the NAR government, some 100 radical black Muslims
blew up the police station in an attempted coup, in which the prime
minister and other officials were held hostage for six days. The NAR
was defeated in 1991, and the PNM returned to power. In 1995, the East
Indian?based party, the United National Congress (UNC), led by Basdeo
Panday, formed a coalition government with the NAR. In 2000, Panday
narrowly won another term.
In Dec. 2001 elections, the governing UNC Party and the PNM Party
gained 18 seats each. The two parties agreed to allow President
Robinson to select the prime minister to end the impasse. But when
Robinson selected Patrick Manning of the PNM because of his ?moral and
spiritual values,? the opposition angrily called for new elections. In
the Oct. 2002 elections, Manning's party declared victory. Maxwell
Richards, a university dean, was selected president by Parliament in
2003.