Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina


The Archipelago of San Andrés, Providencia and Santa Catalina, or, in everyday language, San Andrés and Providencia, is one of the departments of Colombia. It consists of two island groups in the Caribbean Sea about northwest of mainland Colombia, and eight outlying banks and reefs. The largest island of the archipelago is called San Andrés and its capital is San Andrés. The other large islands are Providencia and Santa Catalina Islands which lie to the north-east of San Andrés; their capital is Santa Isabel.

Name

The name is sometimes abbreviated to "Archip. de San Andres". The official website abbreviates it as San Andrés. lists it as "San Andrés, Providencia y Santa Catalina". Statoids lists it as "San Andrés y Providencia".

History

Spain formally claimed the archipelago of San Andres and Providencia in 1510, a few years after the Discovery of the Americas by Christopher Columbus. In 1544 the territory was placed under the administration of the Captaincy General of Guatemala. During the early years, Spain concentrated on exploring and colonizing the mainland, and the islands were hardly settled.
In 1630, English Puritans arrived in Providence Island, under the aegis of the Providence Island Company. These Puritans decide to settle this promising tropical island rather than cold, rocky New England, but the Providence Island colony did not succeed in the same way as the Massachusetts Bay Colony. They established slave-worked plantations and engaged in privateering, which led to the Spanish and Portuguese conquering the colony in May, 1641. In 1670, English buccaneers led by Henry Morgan took over the islands, which he used as a base to attack Panama. The buccaneers abandoned the islands by 1672. There is no record of anyone inhabiting the islands from then until a century later.
In 1775 Lieutenant Tomás O'Neil, a Spaniard of Irish descent, was given military command of the islands and in 1790 named governor. He requested the transfer of the islands to the jurisdiction of the Viceroyalty of New Granada which was granted in 1803. That year Spain assigned the islands together with the province of Veraguas to the Viceroyalty of New Granada. The territory was administered from the province of Cartagena. Soon, trade links with Cartagena were greater than those with Guatemala.
On 4 July 1818, French Corsair Louis-Michel Aury, with 400 men and 14 ships flying the Argentine flag, captured Old Providence and St. Catherine islands. The island was populated by white English-speaking Protestants and their slaves. Aury and his team used the islands as their new base from which to pursue Central American independence. However, his efforts to also support Bolivar in his fight for Venezuelan and Colombian independence were repeatedly turned down.
After the Spanish colonies became independent, the inhabitants of San Andrés, Providence and St. Catherine voluntarily adhered to the Republic of Gran Colombia in 1822, who placed them under the administration of the Magdalena Department. The First Mexican Empire, which was succeeded by the United Provinces of Central America, also claimed the islands. Gran Colombia in turn protested the UPCA's occupation of the eastern coast of Nicaragua. The UPCA broke up in 1838-1840, but Nicaragua carried on the dispute, as did Gran Colombia's successors, New Granada and Colombia. Colombia established a local administration in the islands in 1912.
In 1928, Colombia and Nicaragua signed the Esguerra-Bárcenas Treaty, which gave control of the islands to Colombia. However, when the Sandinista government assumed power in the 1980s, Nicaragua repudiated the treaty. Colombia argues that the treaty's final ratification in 1930 confirms its validity. Colombia and Honduras signed a maritime boundary treaty in 1999 which implicitly accepts Colombian sovereignty over the islands.
In 2001 Nicaragua filed claims with the International Court of Justice over the disputed maritime boundary, claiming in the Caribbean, including the San Andrés and Providencia archipelagoes. Colombia responded that the ICJ has no jurisdiction over the matter, and increased its naval and police presence in the islands. Colombia also defended its claim in the ICJ. On 13 December 2007 the ICJ ruled that the islands were Colombian territory, but left the maritime border dispute unresolved. On 19 November 2012, the International Court of Justice decided that Colombia had sovereignty over the islands.

United States claims

In the 19th century, the United States claimed several uninhabited locations in the area under the Guano Island Act, including several now claimed by Colombia. In 1981 the U.S. ceded its claims to Serrana Bank and Roncador Bank to Colombia and abandoned its claim to Quita Sueño Bank. The United States still maintains claims over Serranilla Bank and Bajo Nuevo Bank and considers them both to be unincorporated territories of the United States.

Declaration of Self Determination

In 1903 the local Raizal population rejected an offer from the US to separate from Colombia in the wake of Panama's secession from Colombia. However, the native population of the Island soon changed their minds when the policies of successive Colombian governments tried consistently to modify the majority Raizal and British ethnic composition of the Islands through extensive migration of Spanish-speaking mainland Colombians. The assimilation and immigration efforts were led largely by Catholic missionaries, which angered the native population, which was Protestant.

Local government and representation

2007 elections

A member of the departmental assembly for 15 years, Pedro Gallardo Forbes, of the Regional Integration Movement, won the 28 October 2007 gubernatorial election, with support from the Colombian Conservative Party and the Radical Change party. He succeeded a governor from the Colombian Liberal Party. He got 8,187 votes, Aury Guerrero Bowie 8,160 votes, and Jack Housni Jaller 4,063 votes. Only 21,991 out of 41,197 potential electors voted in the gubernatorial election.
At the departmental assembly, elected the same day, the 9 seats were distributed among 6 parties: three Liberals, two MIR two Democratic Colombia Party, two SNUP, one Radical Change, and one Conservative.
The new mayor of Providence, Janeth Archbold, a political ally of the new governor, was elected with 1,013 votes against Liberal Mark Taylor, SNUP Arturo Robinson and Conservative Peter Bent.

Geography

Besides the San Andrés and Providencia island groups, there are eight atolls that belong to the Department, including submerged Alice Shoal.

Island of San Andrés

San Andrés Island

This is the main island of the San Andrés group, and the largest of the Department. It is located at. It measures in length with a width of and covers an area of. There is a tiny lagoon in the centre of the island called Big Pond. The principal town is San Andrés in the north of the island. Another town is San Luis on the east coast. Cayo Johnny lies ENE of German Point, the island's northern tip, and Haynes Cay about the same distance east of the island. Cotton Cay is less than south of San Andrés town, on the northeastern coast.

Cayos de Albuquerque (Cayos de S.W., Southwest Cays)

This atoll is southwest of San Andrés at. It is the westernmost point of Colombia. The reef is about across. In the southern part are Cayo del Norte and Cayo del Sur. Cayo del Norte, the larger of the two, is up to high and overgrown with palm trees and bushes. Cayo del Sur, a few hundred metres further South, reaches a height of a little more than and is vegetated with a few bushes, and in the South with mangroves. There is a lighthouse on Cayo del Norte, at, operating since 1980. It is maintained by the Colombian Navy.

Cayos del Este Sudeste (Courtown Cays, Cayos de E.S.E.)

This atoll is east-south-east of San Andrés Island and northeast of Cayos de Alburquerque, at. It is long and wide. There are a few sand cays in the southeast. The largest ones are Cayo del Este, Cayo Bolivar, West Cay, and Cayo Arena, none of which are higher than. All cays are overgrown with palm trees and bushes, and surrounded by mangroves. There is a Colombian Navy lighthouse on Cayo Bolivar. The cays are regularly visited by fishermen from the Colombian mainland and San Andrés. There are two concrete buildings on Cayo Bolivar, and a few wooden huts on the other cays.

Banks and Shoals

Colombia claims sovereignty over six additional outlying banks and shoals: Alice Shoal, Bajo Nuevo Bank, Serranilla Bank, Quita Sueño Bank, Serrana Bank, and Roncador Bank.

Demographics

The Departamento de San Andrés, Providencia y Santa Catalina covers a land area of and had a Census population of 59,573. The latest official estimate for 2007 is 72,923.
Before 1960, the population of the islands was almost entirely Raizals, who are an Afro-Caribbean group, Protestant in religion, speaking San Andrés-Providencia Creole. There is a minority of white English-speaking Protestants of British descent. Colombia has promoted the migration of Spanish-speaking mainlanders, with Catholic missions participating since 1947. This policy seems to be an answer to growing discontent within the Raizal community that could strengthen separatist movements; a raizal majority would in this case win a pro-independence referendum but this could be neutralized by outnumbering them with mainland Colombians.
By 2005, Raizals were only 30% of the 60,000 or more inhabitants of the islands, with the rest being mainland Colombians and English-speaking whites of British descent. Raizals can speak both Spanish and English.

Transportation

Airports

The airport serves the towns of San Andrés and San Luis, but also commercially serves the nearby island of Providencia Island, all being major tourist and vacation spots for South and Central American tourists.
Gustavo Rojas Pinilla International Airport is also known as Sesquicentenario International Airport. The airport is the 6th busiest airport in Colombia in terms of passengers, with 836,234 in 2006. Most of these passengers come from the continental part of the country, due to poor international direct service to the island. Many international tourists have to fly to one of Colombia's or Panama's largest airports to be able to reach the islands. In recent years San Andrés has started to receive seasonal charter flights, mainly from Canada and a few Central American countries.
The airport is one of Colombia's fastest growing airports with a 13.4% increase in the number of passengers between 2005 and 2006.