Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It is owned by NewsCo Limited, based in St. John's, Antigua. [2] Antigua.news is a digital news portal founded in 2022 by ambassador Dario Item as official news channel of the Embassy of Antigua and Barbuda in Madrid, focused on covering current affairs in Antigua and Barbuda, as well as key global news stories, winner of ABGMA best online news ...
Antigua.news icon. Antigua.news (a.k.a. Antigua News or Antigua and Barbuda News) is a digital news and opinion portal founded in 2022 by Ambassador Dario Item as the official news channel of the Embassy of Antigua and Barbuda in Madrid, focused on delivering coverage of current affairs in Antigua and Barbuda, as well as key global breaking news.
The Daily Observer, the only daily newspaper of Antigua and Barbuda, est. 1993; Northern Daily Leader, published in Tamworth, New South Wales, Australia, and formerly known as The Daily Observer; The Daily Observer, est. 2011; The Daily Observer, published in The Gambia; Liberian Observer, which has also used the name Daily Observer
Winston Derrick (1951 – February 2, 2013) was an Antiguan journalist, media personality, and chairman and managing director of Antigua's Observer Group of Companies which he founded in 1993 with his brother Fergie Derrick. Derrick was the host of the popular "The Voice of the People" daily call-in news show on the media group's radio station ...
This is a list of all settlements in Antigua and Barbuda with over 700 people. A settlement is the capital of a parish if its name appears bolded. It is italicized if the settlement is the largest city in the parish; if both, it is bolded and italicized.
The Outlet was a radical newspaper published in Saint John's, Antigua and Barbuda. [1] [2] The Outlet was founded in 1968. [3] The newspaper was edited by Tim Hector and James Knight. [1] [2] [4] It functioned as a weekly organ of the Antigua Caribbean Liberation Movement (ACLM). [5] For the ACLM the newspaper played a very important role. [6]
However, due to nearly all the islands surrounding Antigua being involved in intense warfare, a famine killed about 8,000 slaves by 1780. [14] This is also around the time when Lord Rodney, a well-respected admiral, took control of Antigua's fleet. In 1776, the Spanish ship Sancta Rita wrecked in Barbuda, causing some controversy. [15]
Antigua and Barbuda is composed of six parishes and two dependencies. Saint John is the most populous parish, home to well over half of Antigua and Barbuda's population. [66] During colonial times, the parishes were governed by parish vestries, however, the parishes now lack any sort of government. [67]