The ties between Antigua & Barbuda and Africa are not new. They stretch back to the earliest days of the nation’s history, when enslaved Africans were torn from their homelands and forced across the Atlantic. From that brutal passage came a heritage that has never been lost. Antigua’s music, from the drumbeats of benna to the infectious rhythms of soca, carries the pulse of Africa. The national dish of pepperpot and fungi has its roots in West African cooking. Proverbs, dance, spirituality and resilience itself all echo the motherland. For generations, the connection has been cultural and emotional. Today Antigua & Barbuda is working to make it economic and political as well.
The government has been clear about the importance of deepening ties with Africa. Prime Minister Gaston Browne has often spoken about the need for small states to look beyond the traditional centres of power, and Africa has become a natural partner. Not only does it share the painful legacy of slavery and colonialism, but it is also a vast and growing market with ambitions that mirror those of the Caribbean.
Antigua & Barbuda has also been active in the most recent Africa–CARICOM conversations. At the 2025 summit in Addis Ababa, Prime Minister Browne was one of the most vocal leaders, calling the gathering a historic chance to reshape relations across the Atlantic. He pressed for stronger economic, cultural and political ties, but also put reparatory justice firmly on the table, urging that the descendants of enslaved Africans deserve more than words of sympathy.
That summit reflected a wider momentum that has been steadily gathering pace. In recent years, the African Union and CARICOM have signed agreements aimed at deepening investment and collaboration, and the African Development Bank has formalised cooperation with the Caribbean Development Bank. These initiatives are laying the groundwork for real economic pathways across the Atlantic, and Antigua & Barbuda has been among the governments pushing for such partnerships, recognising that cultural kinship can be the basis for practical cooperation.
“The promise is clear. Antigua & Barbuda can serve as a gateway between the Caribbean and Africa, connecting two regions whose destinies have always been intertwined”
One area where progress is already being made is air connectivity. Antigua & Barbuda has partnered with Air Peace, a leading Nigerian airline that now holds majority shares in LIAT Air, the Antigua-based regional carrier, with plans to launch scheduled flights to Nigeria by early next year. The government has signed air service agreements with Rwanda, Ghana and Morocco, laying the groundwork for future direct links to the continent. Tourism Minister Charles Fernandez has said discussions are underway with RwandAir to begin services ahead of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Antigua next year. Prime Minister Browne has likewise spoken with Kenyan President William Ruto about exploring direct airlift, alongside wider diplomatic cooperation that could even see Antigua & Barbuda establish an embassy in Nairobi. These steps reflect not only ambition but intent, positioning Antigua as a true hub for African-Caribbean exchange, trade and tourism.
“The government has signed air service agreements with Rwanda, Ghana and Morocco.”
Finance and trade are also moving up the agenda. Afreximbank, the African Export-Import Bank, has made clear its commitment to boosting transactions between the two regions, with trade projected to reach nearly US$2 billion annually by the end of the decade. Guyana has already secured a US$1 billion financing package for its oil services industry backed by African partners from Ghana, Egypt and South Africa. While Antigua & Barbuda does not share Guyana’s oil wealth, it stands to benefit from Afreximbank’s push to expand into the Eastern Caribbean. Cultural exchange, too, has enormous potential. Carnival, independence celebrations and other national events already showcase African heritage, and direct partnerships with African artists and performers could enrich them even further. Imagine Ghanaian drummers on stage in St John’s or Antiguan soca stars touring West Africa. These are the kinds of initiatives that could turn shared heritage into lived experience.
Practical hurdles still need to be addressed. Both Africa and the Caribbean face challenges in transport and logistics, which can make trade more complicated than it should be. Limited shipping links and the absence of direct air services are obvious obstacles, and international benchmarks highlight the need for improvement. Yet these very gaps point to the opportunities ahead. Investment in better infrastructure and more efficient systems would not only ease trade but also strengthen the long-term foundations of partnership.
Still, the direction of travel is unmistakable. Antigua & Barbuda’s own story is proof that resilience and ambition can overcome daunting odds. The nation has built a reputation for punching above its weight on the world stage, particularly in climate diplomacy, financial services and tourism. By placing itself at the heart of the Africa–Caribbean conversation, it is once again ensuring its voice is heard.
For ordinary Antiguans and Barbudans, the benefits may take time to filter down, but the symbolism is powerful. To look across the Atlantic and see the distance not as a barrier but as a bridge is to reclaim history in a new way. It is to acknowledge the pain of the past while forging prosperity for the future. Every carnival drumbeat, every African-infused dish, every shared proverb already affirms the continuity of culture. What is changing now is that governments, banks and businesses are adding their weight, turning heritage into opportunity.
The promise is clear. Antigua & Barbuda can serve as a gateway between the Caribbean and Africa, connecting two regions whose destinies have always been intertwined. History forced them together through suffering. The future may bind them together through choice, solidarity and success.
“The promise is clear. Antigua & Barbuda can serve as a gateway between the Caribbean and Africa, connecting two regions whose destinies have always been intertwined. “

