ST JOHN’S – The Antigua and Barbuda government says it has decided to eliminate the requirement for work permits for nationals of CARICOM countries who are gainfully employed in Antigua and Barbuda, effective January 1 this year.
“The government has also decided that, in keeping with Antigua and Barbuda’s commitment to the economic integration of the Caribbean region, the elimination of work permits for persons who are gainfully employed will be extended to people from the Dominican Republic,” the government said in a statement.
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But the main opposition United Progressive Party (UPP) says it “is gratified to see the Browne administration adopt another of the party’s plans, this time the removal of the work permit requirement for nationals of CARICOM and the Dominican Republic”.
Prime Minister Gaston Browne said his government decided on the decision consistent with its obligations under Articles 45 and 46, clauses 2 (iii) and 3 of the CARICOM Treaty.
The government said that the decision to eliminate the work permits for CARICOM nationals follows an earlier decision to waive all unpaid work permit fees, which were due on December 31 last year.
“This means that all nationals of CARICOM countries and the Dominican Republic who are now in Antigua and Barbuda and are gainfully employed will not be required to pay for a work permit.
“These decisions are an acknowledgment of (i) the role that our Caribbean brothers and sisters have played, alongside native Antiguans and Barbudans, in the development of our country; and (ii) the need for labor, as our economy expands,” it added.
But the UPP, which is challenging to replace the ruling Antigua and Barbuda Labor Party (ABLP) in the January 18 general election, maintains that it had, through its ‘One Caribbean’ policy, announced plans to remove work permit requirements for Caribbean nationals.
“Its adoption by the Labor Party government is accepted by the UPP as validation of its political leader’s vision and ideas, and proof that it is the UPP who is poised to take this country to an elevated level.”
The UPP said that the adoption of the policy is further proof that the party if elected to government, “will not bankrupt the country, as the ALP contends since the Browne administration already has adopted our proposals on fuel price reductions and a revision of the minimum wage, albeit in disappointing quantum”. (CMC)