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Wikipedia

Bonaire

Coordinates: 12°11′N 68°15′W / 12.183°N 68.250°W / 12.183; -68.250

Bonaire (/bɒnˈɛər/;[8] Dutch: Bonaire, pronounced [boːˈnɛːr(ə)] (listen);[9] Papiamento: Boneiru, [buˈneiru], almost pronounced [boˈnɛiru]) is a Dutch island in the Leeward Antilles in the Caribbean Sea. Its capital is the port of Kralendijk, on the west (leeward) coast of the island. Aruba, Bonaire and Curaçao form the ABC islands, 80 km (50 miles) off the coast of Venezuela.[10] Unlike much of the Caribbean region, the ABC islands lie outside Hurricane Alley. The islands have an arid climate that attracts visitors seeking warm, sunny weather all year round. Bonaire is a popular snorkeling and scuba diving destination because of its multiple shore diving sites and easy access to the island's fringing reefs.

Bonaire
Boneiru (Papiamento)
Public Body of Bonaire[1]
Bellafonte Luxury Oceanfront Hotel
Anthem: "Tera di Solo y suave biento"
Location of Bonaire (circled in red)

in the Caribbean

Coordinates: 12°9′N 68°16′W / 12.150°N 68.267°W / 12.150; -68.267
CountryNetherlands
Overseas regionCaribbean Netherlands
Incorporated into the Netherlands10 October 2010 (dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles)
Capital
(and largest city)
Kralendijk
Government
 • Lt. GovernorEdison Rijna
Area
 • Total288 km2 (111 sq mi)
Population
 (1 January 2022)[4]
 • Total22,573[2]
 • Density69/km2 (180/sq mi)
DemonymBonairean
Languages
 • OfficialDutch
 • Recognised regionalPapiamento[5]
Time zoneUTC−4 (AST)
Calling code+599-7
ISO 3166 codeBQ-BO, NL-BQ1
CurrencyUS Dollar ($) (USD)
Internet TLD

As of 1 January 2022, the island's population totaled 22,573 permanent residents,[11] an increase of nearly 6000 since 2012. The island's total land area is 288 square kilometres (111 sq mi);[3] it is 38.6 kilometres (24.0 mi) long from north to south, and ranges from 4.8–8 km (3.0–5.0 mi) wide from east to west. A short 800 metres (0.50 mi) west of Bonaire across the sea is the uninhabited islet Klein Bonaire with a total land area of 6 km2 (2.3 sq mi). Klein Bonaire has low-growing vegetation including cactus (Papiamento: kadushi), with sparse palm trees near the water and is bordered by white sandy beaches and a fringing reef. The reefs, beaches and on-island reserves located on both Bonaire and Klein Bonaire are under the protection of the Bonaire National Marine Park, and managed by Stichting Nationale Parken Bonaire (STINAPA).[12]

Bonaire was part of the Netherlands Antilles until the country's dissolution in 2010,[13] when the island became a special municipality (officially, a "Caribbean public body") within the country of the Netherlands.[14] It is one of three special municipalities in the Caribbean; the others are Sint Eustatius and Saba.[14][15] 80% of Bonaire's population are Dutch nationals, and nearly 60% of its residents were born in the former Netherlands Antilles and Aruba.[16]

Etymology

The name 'Bonaire' is thought to be derived from the Caquetio word 'Bonay', meaning 'low country'. The early Spanish and Dutch modified its spelling to Bojnaj and also Bonaire. French influence, while present at various times, was never strong enough to make the assumption that the name means 'good air'.[17] According to another theory, the name might be derived from the Spanish phrase "buen aire", which does mean 'good air', as the Spanish were the first Europeans to colonise the island.[18][19]

History

 
Traditional old houses with cactus fences, preserved in the outdoor museum of Rincon, Bonaire

Original inhabitants

The most accurate human remains on the islands, dating from 4500 B.C., were found in Curaçao. On different islands the most accurate are 4000 BP in Aruba and 3300 BP in Bonaire. These individuals are currently called by the term Archaic Indians. The Caquetío(arawak) Indians, a clan having a place in the Arawak language family, arrived at the islands from South America around 500 AD.[20] Archeological remains of the Caquetio culture have been found at certain sites northeast of Kralendijk and near Lac Bay. Caquetio rock paintings and petroglyphs have been preserved in caves at Spelonk, Onima, Ceru Pungi and Ceru Crita-Cabai.[citation needed] The Caquetios were apparently a very tall people, for the Spanish name for the ABC islands was 'las Islas de los Gigantes' or 'the islands of the giants'.[21]

Spanish period

In 1499, Alonso de Ojeda arrived in Curaçao and a neighbouring island that was almost certainly Bonaire.[citation needed] Ojeda was accompanied by Amerigo Vespucci and Juan de la Cosa.[citation needed] De La Cosa's Mappa Mundi of 1500 shows Bonaire and calls it Isla do Palo Brasil or "Island of Brazilwood".[citation needed] The Spanish decided that the three ABC Islands were useless because they did not have known metal deposits, and in 1515 the Caquetío were deported to work in the copper mines of Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola; the total number may have been between 500 and 2000.[22][21][23]

Spain colonized Bonaire since 1499 for a period of approximately one century. Likewise, one of the oldest references to the name of the island is found in the archive of the Main Public Registry of the city of Caracas (Venezuela). A document dated December 9, 1595 specifies that Don Francisco Montesinos, Curate and Vicar of "las Yslas de Curasao, Aruba y Bonaire" conferred a power of attorney to Pedro Gutiérrez de Lugo, resident in Caracas, to collect from the Royal Treasury of His Catholic Majesty Don Felipe II, the salary that corresponded to him for his office as priest and vicar of the islands.

 
Fort Oranje in Kralendijk, built in 1639

Remnants of Bonaire's indigenous population can be seen in some of the island's current inhabitants. In fact, the majority of the population is of mixed black and white descent, with minorities of Europeans (descendants of the Dutch) and Africans (descendants of slaves)

In 1526, Juan Martínez de Ampiés was appointed Spanish commander of the ABC Islands.[citation needed] He brought back some of the original Caquetio Indian inhabitants to Bonaire and Curaçao. Ampies also imported domesticated animals from Spain, including cows, donkeys, goats, horses, pigs and sheep. The Spaniards thought that Bonaire could be used as a cattle plantation worked by natives. The cattle were raised for hides rather than meat. The Spanish inhabitants lived mostly in the inland town of Rincon which was safe from pirate attack.[21]

Dutch period

The Dutch West India Company was founded in 1621. Starting in 1623, ships of the West India Company called at Bonaire to obtain meat, water and wood. The Dutch also abandoned some Spanish and Portuguese prisoners there, and these people founded the town of Antriol, which is a contraction of Spanish al interior (English: inside). The Dutch and the Spanish fought from 1568 to 1648 in what is now known as the Eighty Years War. In 1633, the Dutch – having lost the island of St. Maarten to the Spanish – retaliated by attacking Curaçao, Bonaire and Aruba. Bonaire was conquered in March 1636. The Dutch built Fort Oranje in 1639.[24]

While Curaçao emerged as a centre of the slave trade, Bonaire became a plantation of the Dutch West India Company. Salt became a major export product of the island; a small number of African slaves were put to work alongside Indians and convicts, cultivating dyewood and maize and harvesting solar salt around Blue Pan.[25][26] Slave quarters, built entirely of stone and too short for a man to stand upright in, still stand in the area around Rincon and along the salt pans. The slave population grew in the 1710s when a famine and social unrest on Curaçao caused the Dutch to relocate a large number of slaves to Bonaire.[27] Historically, Dutch was not widely spoken on the island outside of colonial administration; its use increased in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[28] Students on Curaçao, Aruba and Bonaire were taught predominantly in Spanish until the late 18th century when the British took Curaçao, Aruba and Bonaire; the teaching of Spanish was restored when Dutch rule resumed in 1815.

During the Napoleonic Wars, the Netherlands lost control of Bonaire twice, once from 1800 to 1803, and again from 1807 to 1816.[27][29] During these intervals, the British had control of the neighbouring island of Curaçao and of Bonaire. The ABC islands were returned to the Netherlands under the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1814. During the period of British rule, a large number of white traders settled on Bonaire, and they built the settlement of Playa (Kralendijk) in 1810.

Emancipation

From 1816 until 1868, Bonaire remained a government plantation. In 1825, there were about 300 government-owned slaves on the island. Gradually many of the slaves were freed and became freemen with an obligation to render some services to the government. The remaining slaves were freed on 30 September 1862 under the Emancipation Regulation. A total of 607 government slaves and 151 private slaves were freed at that time.[21]

 
Slave huts

World War II

During the German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II, Bonaire was a protectorate of Britain and the United States. The American army built the Flamingo Airport as an air force base. After Germany invaded the Netherlands on May 10, 1940, authorities declared Martial law, and many German and Austrian citizens, as well as Dutch thought to be German sympathizers, were interned in a camp on Bonaire.[30] Some of these remained in this camp for the war's duration, and others were transferred to new camps that were built on the mainland in the first year of the war.[31][32][33] In 1944, Princess Juliana and Eleanor Roosevelt visited the troops on Bonaire.[21]

Bonairean sailors made an above-average contribution during World War II. German U-boats tried to eliminate shipping around the Aruba and Curaçao refineries and thus eliminate the island's considerable fuel production for the Allies. Bonairean crewed ships also took part in these battles. Among the many, missing after the war, were the 34 Bonaireans who died on these ships (more than on the other islands of the then Dutch West Indies). During hostilities, the site where the Divi Flamingo Beach Resort & Casino now stands served as an internment camp for Germans and Austrians living in the Antilles, mainly because they were distrusted. There were fears they could have sabotaged the giant oil refineries on Aruba and Curaçao that were supplying paraffin to the Allied air fleet.

The camp was in operation from 1940 to 1947. In total, 461 people were interned during this period without trial, most of them completely innocent. Among them were Medardo de Marchena and also the photographer Fred Fischer, then still an Austrian citizen. Many German internees had just fled Nazi violence. But there were also German prisoners of war, some of whom remained after the war. In September 1943, the father of George Maduro, after whom Madurodam is named, asked Queen Wilhelmina to exchange his son for the German internees on Bonaire. The government did not grant the request. After the war, the empty barracks became Bonaire's first hotel: Zeebad.

 
Royal visit of Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard in 1955

Post-war

After the war, the economy of Bonaire continued to develop. The airport was converted to civilian use and the former internment camp was converted to become the first hotel on Bonaire.[34] The Dutchman Pierre Schunck started a clothing factory known as Schunck's Kledingindustrie Bonaire, a partial solution for the large female surplus on the island. In 1964, Trans World Radio began broadcasting from Bonaire. Radio Netherlands Worldwide built two shortwave transmitters on Bonaire in 1969. The second major hotel (Bonaire Beach Hotel)[35] was completed in 1962. Salt production resumed in 1966 when the salt pans were expanded and modernized by the Antilles International Salt Company, a subsidiary of the International Salt Company. Part of the facilities extend into the Caribbean Sea and form the popular dive site known as Salt Pier.[36] The Bonaire Petroleum Corporation (BOPEC) oil terminal was opened in 1975 for trans-shipping oil.[37] Politically Bonaire formed part of the Netherlands Antilles from 1954 to 2010; it is now a special municipality within the Netherlands.[14] In 2011 the island officially adopted the US dollar as its currency.[38]

Dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles

On 10 October 2010, the Netherlands Antilles was dissolved. As a result, the government of the Netherlands assumed the task of public administration of the Caribbean Netherlands or BES Islands comprising Bonaire, St Eustatius and Saba. The three islands acquired new status as "special municipalities" (bijzondere gemeenten), making them part of the Netherlands itself, a form of "public body" (openbaar lichaam) as outlined in article 134 of the Dutch Constitution. Special municipalities do not constitute part of a province.

As a special municipality, Bonaire is very much like ordinary Dutch municipalities in that it has a mayor, aldermen and a municipal council, and is governed according to most Dutch laws. Antillean legislation remained in force after 10 October 2010, with the exception of those cases where Antillean law was replaced by Bonaire's municipal law. It was believed best for the island to not introduce the entire body of Dutch legislation at one time as it would cause confusion. Therefore, Dutch legislation is being introduced in stages. Bonaire retained its own unique culture while residents enjoy the same rights as Dutch citizens, including the right to vote in Dutch parliamentary elections in the Netherlands. Residents also have access to new or improved facilities and government benefits including, but not limited to, universal health care; improved health care facilities; better educational facilities with additional training for teachers, new teaching methods and new school buildings; social housing for low-income individuals and families; a centrally dispatched single police force, fire department and ambulance service.[39] While the three islands are considered to be land of the Netherlands, they are not a part of the European Union, therefore not subject to European Union Law. They are considered to be an overseas country and territory.[40]

Bonaire's non-governmental organization, Nos Ke Boneiru Bèk ("We Want Bonaire Back"), is against the current constitutional relationship with the Netherlands. With reference to Bonaire's 2004 referendum, the organization is of the opinion that such an arrangement was never the choice of the people. The Dutch Minister of Home Affairs and Kingdom Relations, Ronald Plasterk, replied to the organization confirming that only the "Island Councils in the Caribbean Netherlands have the authority to decide on holding a constitutional referendum, not the Dutch government." In response, the organization gathered more than 3,500 signatures in 2013 favouring a new referendum. In a letter to minister Plasterk, James Finies, chairman of Nos Ke Boneiru Bèk, requested a "new referendum under the right of self-determination". Plasterk responded by advising Finies that preparations for the evaluation of the public entity structure had begun for 2015, but a "possible change of the constitutional relations is not part of that evaluation".[41] The new referendum took place on 18 December 2015.[42] 65% of the turnout voted that they were not happy with the current relationship between Bonaire and the Netherlands.[43][44]

Geography

 
Enlargeable, detailed map of Bonaire
 
Satellite image of Bonaire and the small island of Klein Bonaire
 
Map of Bonaire, 1914–1917

Bonaire lies about 80 kilometres (50 mi) off the coast of Venezuela on the continental shelf of South America, and is thus geologically considered a part of the continent.

Geologists believe that Bonaire was formed relatively recently. As the nearby continental shelf (now located near Montserrat, and the cause of the volcanic activity on that island) moved through the area, it forced a large mass of rock to the ocean surface and created the islands of the Lesser and Greater Antilles, including Bonaire. As the seabed rose a vast coral reef grew on what is now dry land. These corals were eventually exposed to air and perished, becoming surface limestone deposits over the millennia.[45]

Vast amounts of coral skeletons may be seen along the shoreline and across the interior of Bonaire. The island is essentially a coral reef that has been geologically pushed up and out of the sea. This also resulted in the natural fringing reef system seen today, in which the coral formations start at the shoreline. Tidal variations are only about 55–60 centimetres (1.8–2.0 ft), so the corals start at the low tide line and continue on, following the underwater topology of the island's base. Bonaire's tides are more affected by a combination of wind and low/ high-pressure systems than by the moon.[45]

The northern end of the island is relatively mountainous, although its highest peak (Brandaris) is only 240 metres (790 feet). The southern part of the island is nearly flat and barely rises above sea level. A significant portion of this southern region is covered with sea water in process of evaporation for salt production. This area also contains Lac Bay with its large mangrove forest. The shoreline of Bonaire is dotted with lagoons and inlets, the largest of which is Goto Lake in the north. These lagoons and wetlands provide an excellent habitat for a wide variety of shorebirds.[45]

Klein Bonaire, the small island in the sheltered lee of Bonaire, has the same geological history. While Bonaire has some hills and variations in altitude, Klein Bonaire's surface is quite level and just a few feet above high tide. Because the island is as yet undeveloped, the fringing reef system surrounding Klein Bonaire is truly pristine. The smaller island is entirely ringed with dive sites.[45]

Bonaire has a land area of 288 km2 (111 sq mi), while Klein Bonaire is an additional 6 km2 (2.3 sq mi).

Washington Slagbaai National Park is an ecological preserve on the north side of the island. The highest point of Bonaire, Mount Brandaris, is 240 m (790 ft) tall and is located within this preserve. It has a complete view of the island.

Climate

Bonaire has a warm, dry (though humid) and windy climate. The average temperature is 27.5 °C (81.5 °F) with a 1.4 °C (2.5 °F) seasonal variation and 5.6 °C (10 °F) daily variation. The ocean temperature around the island fluctuates between 26 and 30 °C (78 and 86 °F). The highest recorded temperature is 35.8 °C (96.4 °F) and the lowest, 19.8 °C (67.6 °F). Nearly constant winds blow from the east with an average speed of 22 kilometres per hour (12 kn).[46]

The humidity is very constant, averaging 76% and fluctuating between 85% and 66% on a daily basis. Average annual rainfall is 520 millimetres (20.5 in), most of which occurs in October through January.[46] Bonaire lies outside the hurricane belt, though its weather and oceanic conditions are occasionally affected by hurricanes and tropical storms. This semi-arid climate is conducive to a variety of cacti and other desert plants.

Ecology

 
Rock hind in Bonaire

Bonaire is fringed by a coral reef which is accessible to divers from the shore along the lee side of the island (facing west-southwest). The entire coastline of the island was designated a marine sanctuary in 1979, an effort to preserve and protect the delicate coral reef and the marine life that depends on it. There are more than 350 species of fish[47] and sixty species of coral living in Bonaire's reef.[48] Boulder Star Coral (Montastraea annularis) is the most common coral, according to a 2011 survey.[49] In 2011, biologists discovered a new species of jellyfish in Bonaire, the highly venomous Bonaire banded box jellyfish (Tamoya ohboya).

Bonaire is also famed for its flamingo populations and its donkey sanctuary. Flamingos are drawn to the brackish water of the island's lagoons, which harbors the shrimp upon which they feed. Bonaire is home to one of only four nesting grounds for the Caribbean flamingo. Located in the Pekelmeer in the southern part of the island, no human entry is permitted in this sanctuary.[50] In the 16th century, Europeans introduced sheep, goats, pigs, horses and donkeys on Bonaire, and the descendants of the donkeys, goats, and pigs roam the island today.

Bonaire is also home to the ecologically vulnerable yellow-shouldered amazon parrot, Amazona barbadensis.[51]

Environmental initiatives

 
A donkey colony

The island of Bonaire has long been a leader in nature conservation and ecological responsibility. The national park foundation, Stichting Nationale Parken (STINAPA), was founded in 1962 for the purpose of actively protecting nature on the island. In 1969 STINAPA succeeded in establishing both the flamingo nesting sanctuary and Washington National Park, the first such nature preserves in the Caribbean. In 1979, the Slagbaai plantation was added to the park, now known as Washington Slagbaai National Park (WSNP). The Bonaire National Marine Park (BNMP) was also established in 1979.[52] The Marine Park consists of the whole coastline of Bonaire from the high-water mark down to a depth of 200 feet (61 m) and includes a large mangrove forest in Lac Bay.[53] Lac Bay, Klein Bonaire, Pelkermeer, Slagbaai and Gotomeer are recognized as wetlands of international significance under the Ramsar Convention.[54]

Due to a public-private sector partnership, programs are being developed to advance the local awareness and attitudes toward conservation and habitat preservation in order to proactively protect Bonaire's ecosystem. A new sewage treatment plant will contribute to protecting the reefs and the seawater quality. In March 2013 Selibon NV,[55] the national garbage-processing plant, opened an environmental court where the general public can bring glass, cans, paper, scrap metal, cardboard, batteries, motor oil, cooking oil, electronics, mobile phones and textiles.

The island is environmentally aware and protective of its coral reefs, the diversity of its aquatic ecosystems, and the conservation of its many species and natural environments above and below the water. The island's government, businesses and residents are committed to recycling waste products, and making others aware of the importance and benefits.[55] Divers and dive shops take part in collecting debris washed ashore and preparing it for recycling.[55]

Bonaire gets a significant amount of its electricity from an array of twelve wind generators along its northeastern coastline which began operating in 2010. This renewable source now fills 40-45% of the island's electricity needs. Work continues in developing additional renewable sources of energy, including bio-diesel and solar, with the goal of becoming 100% reliant on renewables.[56][57]

Washington Slagbaai National Park

 
Washington Slagbaai National Park

The entire northern tip of Bonaire is a protected nature reserve, the Washington Slagbaai National Park. The 6000-hectare park was established in 1969 as the first nature park in the Netherlands Antilles. It is home to a wide variety of habitats, such as the bocas (inlets), dunes on the north coast, salt pans, pos (springs) and mountain areas. The park is rich in birds and other animals, especially lizards, including iguanas. Within the park there are two areas recognised internationally as important wetlands under the Ramsar Convention: the Slagbaai salt marsh and Lake Gotom. The park is also of great cultural-historical importance, not least because of the plantations and the history of Slagbaai. At the entrance to the park is the Bonaire Museum. From the entrance there are several signposted walks. The park is easily accessible by car and mountain bikers are also welcome.

Bonaire National Marine Park

The Bonaire National Marine Park is a legally protected underwater park surrounding the entire island and Klein Bonaire.

The park was established in 1979 with the support of the World Wide Fund for Nature and others, and is managed by the Foundation of National Parks Bonaire (STINAPA Bonaire). Off the coast is the island of Klein Bonaire. There are about sixty dive sites.[citation needed]

Klein Bonaire

 
Coast of Klein Bonaire

Off the coast of Kralendijk lies the island of Klein Bonaire. The island is 700 hectares in size, completely flat and only covered with small bushes and cacti. There are at least 76 species of plants and about 55 species of animals on the island. It is surrounded by a coral reef. The beaches on the north and west side are the most important nesting sites for sea turtles. There are also several salt pans or salt lakes on the island. Red flamingos feed there; Bonaire has one of the largest flamingo populations in the world. For this reason and for the pristine coral reefs and sea turtle nesting beaches, the island is protected as a wetland of international importance by the Ramsar Convention. With the growth of diving tourism on Bonaire, project developers wanted to build hotels on Klein Bonaire. Just before the turn of the century, the island was bought and safeguarded by the Island Territory of Bonaire with the help of the Netherlands, the World Wide Fund for Nature and other conservationists. Since 2001, Klein Bonaire has been a legally protected nature reserve. The island is accessible by boat for divers, snorkellers and day-trippers.

Lac

The Lac (lake) is a shallow lagoon in the southeast of Bonaire. The 700 hectare area is surrounded by mangroves. The lake is part of the protected underwater park and has been designated an aquatic area of international importance under the Ramsar Convention. The bay is unique for the presence of seagrasses and mangroves. Part of the mangroves is virtually undisturbed due to limited accessibility, making it important as a resting area for bird species. Lac is an important resting and nesting area for many marine birds and invertebrates, including the queen conch or Karkó. This mollusk used to be found in large numbers here, but overfishing has largely eradicated the population. The area serves as a nursery for reef fish and is the feeding ground for the green sea turtle.

Pekelmeer

Pekel Lake and the flamingo reserve (800 hectares) are part of the large aquatic area in the south-west of the island. Salt is still extracted from this area. It is also the most important feeding and living area for the flamingo. Depending on the season, between 2000 and 7000 flamingos can be found in this area. The flamingo reserve is the most important breeding site in the Southern Caribbean. The total population migrating between Bonaire and South America is estimated at 20,000 individuals. The flamingo places special demands on its environment (water quality, tranquillity) and is very sensitive to disturbance. The Pekelmeer and the flamingo reserve have been designated as a water area of international importance under the Ramsar Convention. Bonaire will continue to actively protect the flamingo, the symbol of the island.

Salt pans and caves

 
Cargill Salt, Bonaire

Salt pans are salt lakes or inlets that are closed to the sea by a dead coral dyke. They have an important function because they ensure the collection and filtration of (rain) water. This prevents nutrients and soil particles from reaching the reef and causing damage to the corals. This function is especially crucial during heavy rainfall. The salt pans are also an important feeding ground for many waterbirds. Slagbaai, Gotomeer, Pekelmeer and the Klein Bonaire salt pans are aquatic areas of international importance in the context of the Ramsar Convention.

Bonaire has many dozens of caves. As a geological manifestation they give a picture of the oldest history of the island. In several places the caves have cave drawings made by the original inhabitants of Bonaire. Some caves are home to bats or the blind shrimp Typhlatya.[58] Bats play a useful role in the ecosystem: they trap a large number of insects (including mosquitoes) or provide pollination of flowers, including cactus flowers. The greatest threat to bats is the destruction or disturbance of their roosts.

Geology

Bonaire lies on the Caribbean Plate, a tectonic plate bounded by four other tectonic plates: the North American Plate, the Cocos Plate, the Nazca Plate and the South American Plate. Bonaire as an island was formed in the Tertiary when the Caribbean plate boundary (the volcanic arc that formed the Caribbean islands to the east) shifted eastward.

The geology of Bonaire is dominated by gently dipping carbonate rocks ranging in age from Cretaceous (≈90-100 million years ago (Ma)) to Miocene (≈5 Ma), which lie unconformably on a pre-Cretaceous igneous basement. Where the unconformity corresponds with sea-level erosion, caves are common.

Government

 
The local parliament and Council House in Kralendijk

2010 referendum

Prior to the 2010 referendum, the Netherlands Antilles (comprising the islands of Curaçao, Bonaire, St. Eustatius, St. Maarten and Saba) were governed as a parliamentary democracy based on the Dutch system of government with free elections held every four years. Dissension about their political future resulted in four of the five islands advocating for separation from the Netherlands Antilles. Some of the island residents wanted autonomy while others wanted more integration.[59]

In 2005 a conference was held by the governments of the Netherlands, Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles to discuss future constitutional reform and the dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles. In 2006, Sint Maarten and Curaçao chose autonomy, and Bonaire, St. Eustatius and Saba opted for a closer relationship with the Netherlands. Constitutional referendums and dismantlement of the Netherlands Antilles was scheduled to take place in 2010.[60][61]

Bonaire's announced referendum scheduled for 26 March 2010 was canceled in February 2010. The governor of the Dutch Antilles, Frits Goedgedrag, decided to cancel it because it probably contravened international law since part of the population was barred from voting. European Dutch nationals were only allowed to vote if they arrived on the island before 1 January 2007.[62][63] The referendum was postponed to September and then October 2010.[64] Eventually the referendum was held on 17 December 2010, with 84% voting in favor of becoming part of the Netherlands. However, as the 35% voter turnout rate was below the required 51%, the results of the referendum were declared invalid.[65]

Judicial Institution and Prison

The Judicial Institution (JI) of the Dutch Caribbean (Justitiële Inrichting Caribisch Nederland), based on Bonaire, is located in Kralendijk. Since 10 October 2010, the centre has been under the responsibility of the Department of Judicial Institutions (DJI), the agency of the Dutch Ministry of Justice and Security for the execution of sentences and custodial measures. The Bonaire site is both a House of Detention and a Judicial Institution. Since 6 December 2010 there is capacity for 76 men, women and juveniles. The name in Papiamento is Institushon Hudisial Karibe Hulandes, Boneiru site.

Economy

 
A proportional representation of Bonaire exports, 2019
 
American flamingos at the sanctuary at the southern end of Bonaire

Tourism

Bonaire's economy is mainly based on tourism, taking advantage of its warm, dry climate and natural environment. The island caters to scuba divers and snorkelers, as the surrounding coral reefs are well preserved and easily accessible from the shore. Bonaire has been widely recognized for many years in the diving community as one of the world's best shore diving destinations.[66]

Bonaire's Marine Park offers a total of 86 named dive sites and is home to over 57 species of soft and stony coral and more than 350 recorded fish species.[67] Most resorts and hotels have an on-site dive shop, and other accommodations are affiliated with a dive operation. The license plates carry the logo Diver's Paradise (in English).[68]

Lac Bay, in the southeastern part of the island, attracts wind surfers from around the world to Bonaire. The shallow Bay is on the windward side of the island, so trade winds are strong and constant. A barrier reef across the mouth of the bay allows windsurfers of all skill levels to select wave conditions they like. Lac Bay is one of the stops in the PWA Windsurfing Freestyle World Cup and has hosted the Prokids IFCA Championship. Five of the PWA's ten highest ranked freestyle windsurfers are from Bonaire: Kiri Thode, Amado Vrieswijk, Bjorn Saragoza, Tonky Frans and Taty Frans.[69] In the northern end of Lac Bay is one of the best preserved mangrove forests in the Caribbean, which is popular for kayaking and snorkelling.[70]

 
Sunset In Bonaire

Bonaire is also a port of call for more than fifteen cruise lines who make more than eighty calls per season at the island. The total passenger capacity for cruise ships in Bonaire is about 185,000.[71]

Tourism infrastructure in Bonaire is contemporary and offers a variety of types of accommodations including hotels, full-service resorts, a few small bed and breakfasts and self-catering vacation rentals of all kinds. Other tourist activities include kite-boarding, windsurfing, mountain-biking, hiking, sailing, charter fishing, boating and bird-watching.[72] All-in-all tourist expenditures in Bonaire are estimated at $125 million per year.[73]

Currency

In 2011 the BES Islands replaced their currency, the Netherlands Antillean guilder (ISO 4217: ANG, symbol: ƒ), with the US dollar rather than replacing it with the euro which is used in the European Netherlands. The decision was based primarily on the needs for tourism and trade. Most countries and territories in the Caribbean use the dollar as their currency or have a currency linked to the dollar as legal tender. The guilder was pegged to the US dollar for decades with an exchange rate of ƒ1.79 = US$1.00. Adopting the dollar put an end to the dual-currency payment system and foreign exchange charges.[74] The guilder remained in use in Curaçao and Sint Maarten.

Taxes

The separate tax regimes for Bonaire, St Eustatius and Saba present a greater risk of double taxation or double exemption from taxes. In an effort to remove the risk, two plans were introduced. One plan prevents double taxation between the Netherlands (Europe) and the BES Islands while the other prevents double taxation between the BES Islands and third countries. The new regime will generate a total annual tax revenue estimated at $52 million which is equal to the current tax revenues on the three islands. The combined population of the three Islands is approximately 20,000 with about half that many being income-taxpayers.[39]

Salt production

Utilizing the naturally low-lying geography and traditional Dutch dike design, much of Bonaire's southern half has been made into a giant system of ponds and pools which evaporate seawater to produce salt. Presently operated by Cargill, Bonaire's solar salt works produces 400,000 tons of industrial grade salt per year. After collection, the salt is then washed and stored in pyramid-shaped piles roughly 50 feet in height, each containing approximately 10,000 metric tons of 99.6 percent pure salt.[75] The salt facility operates its own pier where ships are loaded with salt destined for North American, European and Western Pacific markets. Bonaire's salt is used primarily in industry.[76]

 
Bonaire Salt Pier

The large condensing ponds which ring the crystallizer basins, called the Pekelmeer, are a natural habitat for numerous species of brine shrimp which in turn feed flocks of hundreds of pink flamingoes and other migratory birds. This is the location of Bonaire's flamingo sanctuary.

Oil storage and shipment

The Bonaire Petroleum Corporation (BOPEC) is a fuel oil storage and transshipment terminal on Bonaire. BOPEC is wholly owned by Venezuelan oil company PDVSA, and functions primarily as a storage facility for multiple grades of refined and non-refined oils from Venezuela and refineries on Curaçao and Aruba. BOPEC also has mixing and blending capabilities for its stored fuels. BOPEC's #1 pier can receive tankers up to 500,000DWT,[77] which means there are only seven ships in the world that are too big for the BOPEC terminal.[78] A fire at the BOPEC terminal in 2010 is believed to have had a significant impact on Goto Lake and at least one other nearby lagoon.[79]

Plantations and plantation houses

In 1868 and 1870, a large part of the government land was auctioned and sold. These included five lots for forestry and livestock farming and nine lots for salt exploitation. The buyers of these large lots were mainly wealthy people from Curaçao, successful merchants, who had no intention of living on their plantations. There are no real plantations on Bonaire. The climate and soil conditions on Bonaire are not very favourable for the cultivation of fruits and vegetables of any size. Only salt extraction is economically attractive. In addition, on some "plantations" aloe cultivation (last exported in 1973), maize cultivation (due to drought there was not enough harvest every year), charcoal burning and cattle breeding (mainly goats, last exported in 1970) were carried out.

In the early 20th century, Bonaire's middle class was also able to buy plantation land. On Curaçao, the land house served as the main house of a plantation, where the owner lived. In the immediate vicinity were outbuildings, barns, stables and corrals. Surrounding it were the slave dwellings. On Bonaire, the plantation houses became the owners' cottages, where they stayed during the weekends. Often during the week there was an overseer (vito) who supervised the work on the plantation.

Transportation

Bonaire's first airport was located near Tra'i Montaña Subi Blanku and crossed the current path of Kralendijk to Rincon and was built in 1936. The airport proved to be too small when American soldiers arrived on Bonaire in the second half of 1943. The commander stated that a new airport had to be built. Construction began in December 1943, with the new "Flamingo Airport" opening in 1945. A small terminal was built that was suitable for the number of passengers at the time. This building was used until mid-1976. The airport had received many extensions of both the runway and the terminal itself.

Today the airport is known as Flamingo International Airport and is served by a variety of both domestic and international airlines. Services from the US include Delta Air Lines, American Airlines and United Airlines. Airlines providing European service include TUI Netherlands and KLM. Consistent air service from Curaçao is available through Divi Divi Air and EZ Air.

The airport is equipped with a fire station, control tower and hangar. Plans are underway for modifications to the current airport facilities, runway and the fire station.

Settlements

 
Bonaire coast

The two towns on the island are Kralendijk (the capital) and Rincon. Kralendijk has many suburbs/neighbourhoods, although on an island with such a small population, the distinction is not always clearcut.

The town of Kralendijk is a result of a merger of five villages: Antriol (Entrejol), Nikiboko, Noord Saliña, Playa, and Tera Kora. The town of Rincon is the only other town.[80]

Labra, Ishiri, Kokorobi, Jan Doran, Vlijt, Rigot, Porto Spano and Kunchi were several smaller towns that had existed in the national park but were later abandoned.

Demography

The population is estimated to be 20,104 in 2019. Most of its inhabitants are of African descent, or mixed race, the product of European and African intermarriage, for whom the term "mulatto" is often used. However, a significant part of the population has a variety of origins, including the Netherlands, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Colombia, Suriname and the United States, among others.

 
Age Sex Pyramid 2016 Bonaire

Main population centres

 
St. Louis Bertrand a Catholic church in Rincon, Bonaire

The star on Bonaire's flag has six points, representing the six original settlements. Due to population growth and building expansion, five of them have grown together with the capital Kralendijk. Only Rincon, the oldest settlement on the island, located in the northern half, remained an independent village. In addition to these nuclei, a number of new districts have been added over the years. Behind Kralendijk, against the hill, are the Republiek and Santa Barbara districts. Behind Santa Barbara, on the coast, is the luxurious new district of Sabadeco (Santa Barbara Development Corporation). Beyond the airport, in the direction of the salt flats, is the neighbourhood of Belnem, named after Harry Belafonte. The population of as 2017 is distributed in the old towns and districts as follows:[81]

  • Kralendijk with a total of 10,620 inhabitants.[81]
  • Playa (centre of Kralendijk) with 2,571 inhabitants[81]
  • Tera Kora with 1,568 inhabitants[81]
  • Nikiboko with 3,058 inhabitants[81]
  • Antriol with 3,811 inhabitants[81]
  • Nort di Saliña with 1,217 inhabitants[81]
  • Rincon with 1,875 inhabitants[81]

Religion

Bonaire is predominantly Roman Catholic (68%), and there are also Protestant minorities.[82] As in the rest of the former Netherlands Antilles, the predominant religion in Bonaire is Christianity, with the Catholic Church being especially important. Although the island passed from the rule of Catholic Spain to the Protestant Netherlands, Catholicism remained the principal island religion. Ecclesiastically, the churches on Bonaire depend on the Catholic diocese of Willemstad on the neighboring island of Curaçao.

After the discovery of Bonaire by Alonso de Ojeda in 1499, the spiritual life of the Christians was in the hands of the monks who came from Venezuela for baptisms. These missionaries belonged to the Jesuits of the Franciscan order. The first resident priest was Jacob Bernardus Eisenbel (Dutch), who came from Aruba to settle for several years in Bonaire and after whom the Parish of St. Bernard, the main Catholic church of the capital of Bonaire, Kralendijk, is named.

Rincon, Bonaire's second largest city, offers numerous regular festivals, including the annual Simadan (harvest) festivals and Dia di San Juan (St. John's Day).

Religion in Bonaire (2014):[82]

  Roman Catholic (68%)
  Protestant (16%)
  Other religion (4%)
  No denomination (12%)

Bonaire also has an Islamic centre and a Jewish community.[83]

Education

Bonaire's educational system is patterned after the Dutch system. Early grades are taught solely in Papiamento, with more and more Dutch being introduced as the grade level progresses.

Scholengemeenschap Bonaire serves as Bonaire's secondary school, for ages 12–18.[84]

Languages

As Bonaire is part of the Netherlands, Dutch is the official language, and the sole language for all administration and legal matters.[85] However, as at 2017 it is the main language of only 15% of the population — around two thirds use the creole language of Papiamento as their main language.[86]

In the 2001 census, Dutch was the main language of only 8.8% of the population.[87] The most widely spoken language was Papiamento, the primary language of 74.7% of the populace and is recognized by the government.[5][87] Spanish was the main language of 11.8% of the people, English the primary language of 2.8%, and other languages accounted for 1.8%.[87] Bonaire is a polyglot society, with most of Bonaire's population able to converse in at least two of the languages of Papiamento, Dutch, English and Spanish.

Sports

 
Kralendijk Stadium After Renovations

Bonaire residents participate in numerous sporting events, including all the popular sports that attract tourists to the island such as scuba diving, sailing, fishing, boating, windsurfing, kite surfing, biking, baseball, association football, volleyball and tennis. There are multiple dive shops on Bonaire, most of which offer scuba instruction and PADI, NAUI, SSI and CMAS certification.[88] The island's dive shops typically offer scuba tank and dive gear rental, boat diving excursions, snorkeling, kayaking, and naturalist classes. Some dive shops have gas blending stations, and offer tec diving instruction and excursions.[89]

Bonaire hosted the PWA Bonaire World Cup 2014 and the 10th Prokids IFCA Championship 2014 at Lac Bay in Sorobon on the east side of the island.[90] It is home to several professional windsurfing champions.[91] The island is also home to the annual Bonaire Sailing Regatta, a national sailing competition and celebration that has been held every October in Playa.[92] The event first began in 1967 when Captain Don Stewart challenged Hubert Domacasse to a race, wagering 27 cases of beer that his fishing boat "Sislin" was faster than Domacasse's fishing boat "Velia".[93] The races are run between the leeward side of the island and Klein Bonaire.[94]

The Bonaire Football Federation is a member of CONCACAF and the Bonaire Volleyball Federation is an associate member of CAZOVA (Caribbean Zonal Volleyball Association) and NORCECA. The Baseball teams play in the Caribbean region of Little league and Pony league. Bonaire was also confirmed as the 218th Table Tennis National association.[95]

Media

Radio

Trans World Radio (TWR) first established its AM broadcasting site on the island of Bonaire in 1964 to broadcast Christian programs into Latin America and the Caribbean.[96] The programs were broadcast in Spanish, Dutch and English.[97] TWR-Bonaire began their operation with three transmitters, including a Brown-Boveri medium wave transmitter (500 kW over 800 kHz) and two shortwave transmitters (200 kW and 50 kW); however, their license to operate the 500 kW transmitter was revoked in 1999 thereby restricting broadcast to 100 kW. The Brown-Boveri medium wave transmitter was sold and removed from the island. It was replaced with another medium wave transmitter (PJB3-AM).[97] In 2012, TWR-Bonaire was permitted to increase its power from 100 kW to 450 kW but in order to do so, they had to raise 38 million euros (US$43,456,610.00). In 2016 they commissioned Kintronic Labs to build a four-mast, 231 metres (758 ft) parallel-array directional antenna system. On January 31, 2018, they acquired a 450 kW Nautel Broadcast medium wave transmitter for US$3.8 million, and the name changed from Trans World Radio to Shine 800 AM.[97]

 
Bonaire is a popular tourist destination for both recreational diving and shore snorkelling.

Radio Netherlands Worldwide operated a shortwave relay station at 12°12′48″N 68°19′23″W / 12.21333°N 68.32306°W / 12.21333; -68.32306 (Radio Netherlands Bonaire Radio Relay Station). Because of widespread availability of internet links providing higher audio quality and more flexibility, shortwave broadcasts by RNW-Bonaire were discontinued[98] and at the end of October 2012, the radio station was closed and installations dismantled.

Bonaire has two island radio stations that broadcast general information: Bon FM and Radiodifucion Boneriano. The language spoken for both is Papiamento.[99]

Internet and newspapers

There are several internet news sources including BES Reporter in English, Bonaire in Papiamento and Dutch, Bonaire Nieuws in Dutch, and Info Bonaire in English. The local newspapers, some of which are also available online, include The Bonaire Reporter in English, Extra and Boneriano in Papiamento, Bonaire Times in English, Spanish and Dutch,[100] and two Dutch newspapers: Amigoe and Antilliaans Dagblad.[99]

Television

Flamingo Television Bonaire B.V. offers cable programming and internet access via cable connection or fiber optics. Local and regional programming is offered in different languages including Papiamento, Spanish, Dutch and Chinese. English channels are made available through the efforts of a unified group of cable companies comprising the Caribbean Cable Cooperative Ltd.[101]

Digital television programs and internet access are offered by Telbo N.V., a communication and media provider with an IP based infrastructure. They are the primary telephone service provider, and also offer various packages of high quality digital television programs with 130+ digital channels.[102]

Residents of Bonaire receive some of Venezuela's main national television channels, all primarily in Spanish.

Symbols

Flag

The flag, with the six-pointed star, symbolises a compass. The people of Bonaire were and are excellent fishermen and sailors. It is also said that the four points of the ring indicating East, West, South and North are intended to indicate that all people in the world are equal, regardless of where they come from. The red colour refers to the blood and the survivability of the people of Bonaire. Yellow represents the sun, the beach and the flowers of the Kibrahachi and the cactus. White represents peace and internationalisation. Blue represents the sea. The flag has not existed for a long time. It was only on 11 December 1981 that the design was approved, to which the whole population was able to contribute and give its opinion.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ .bq is designated, but not in use, for the Caribbean Netherlands.[6][7] Like the rest of the Netherlands, .nl is primarily in use.

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External links

  •   Media related to Bonaire at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Bonaire travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Breathe Bonaire – Live webcams from Bonaire (including the first megapixel underwater webcam)

bonaire, this, article, about, caribbean, island, other, uses, disambiguation, coordinates, ɛər, dutch, pronounced, boːˈnɛːr, listen, papiamento, boneiru, buˈneiru, almost, pronounced, boˈnɛiru, dutch, island, leeward, antilles, caribbean, capital, port, krale. This article is about the Caribbean island For other uses see Bonaire disambiguation Coordinates 12 11 N 68 15 W 12 183 N 68 250 W 12 183 68 250 Bonaire b ɒ n ˈ ɛer 8 Dutch Bonaire pronounced boːˈnɛːr e listen 9 Papiamento Boneiru buˈneiru almost pronounced boˈnɛiru is a Dutch island in the Leeward Antilles in the Caribbean Sea Its capital is the port of Kralendijk on the west leeward coast of the island Aruba Bonaire and Curacao form the ABC islands 80 km 50 miles off the coast of Venezuela 10 Unlike much of the Caribbean region the ABC islands lie outside Hurricane Alley The islands have an arid climate that attracts visitors seeking warm sunny weather all year round Bonaire is a popular snorkeling and scuba diving destination because of its multiple shore diving sites and easy access to the island s fringing reefs Bonaire Boneiru Papiamento Special municipality of the NetherlandsPublic Body of Bonaire 1 Bellafonte Luxury Oceanfront HotelFlagCoat of armsAnthem Tera di Solo y suave biento source Location of Bonaire circled in red in the CaribbeanCoordinates 12 9 N 68 16 W 12 150 N 68 267 W 12 150 68 267CountryNetherlandsOverseas regionCaribbean NetherlandsIncorporated into the Netherlands10 October 2010 dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles Capital and largest city KralendijkGovernment see Politics of the Netherlands Lt GovernorEdison RijnaArea 3 Total288 km2 111 sq mi Population 1 January 2022 4 Total22 573 2 Density69 km2 180 sq mi DemonymBonaireanLanguages OfficialDutch Recognised regionalPapiamento 5 Time zoneUTC 4 AST Calling code 599 7ISO 3166 codeBQ BO NL BQ1CurrencyUS Dollar USD Internet TLD nl bq a As of 1 January 2022 the island s population totaled 22 573 permanent residents 11 an increase of nearly 6000 since 2012 The island s total land area is 288 square kilometres 111 sq mi 3 it is 38 6 kilometres 24 0 mi long from north to south and ranges from 4 8 8 km 3 0 5 0 mi wide from east to west A short 800 metres 0 50 mi west of Bonaire across the sea is the uninhabited islet Klein Bonaire with a total land area of 6 km2 2 3 sq mi Klein Bonaire has low growing vegetation including cactus Papiamento kadushi with sparse palm trees near the water and is bordered by white sandy beaches and a fringing reef The reefs beaches and on island reserves located on both Bonaire and Klein Bonaire are under the protection of the Bonaire National Marine Park and managed by Stichting Nationale Parken Bonaire STINAPA 12 Bonaire was part of the Netherlands Antilles until the country s dissolution in 2010 13 when the island became a special municipality officially a Caribbean public body within the country of the Netherlands 14 It is one of three special municipalities in the Caribbean the others are Sint Eustatius and Saba 14 15 80 of Bonaire s population are Dutch nationals and nearly 60 of its residents were born in the former Netherlands Antilles and Aruba 16 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Original inhabitants 2 2 Spanish period 2 3 Dutch period 2 3 1 Emancipation 2 3 2 World War II 2 3 3 Post war 2 4 Dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Ecology 3 3 Environmental initiatives 3 4 Washington Slagbaai National Park 3 5 Bonaire National Marine Park 3 6 Klein Bonaire 3 7 Lac 3 8 Pekelmeer 3 9 Salt pans and caves 3 10 Geology 4 Government 4 1 2010 referendum 4 2 Judicial Institution and Prison 5 Economy 5 1 Tourism 5 2 Currency 5 3 Taxes 5 4 Salt production 5 5 Oil storage and shipment 5 6 Plantations and plantation houses 6 Transportation 7 Settlements 8 Demography 8 1 Main population centres 8 2 Religion 8 3 Education 8 4 Languages 9 Sports 10 Media 10 1 Radio 10 2 Internet and newspapers 10 3 Television 11 Symbols 11 1 Flag 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksEtymology EditThe name Bonaire is thought to be derived from the Caquetio word Bonay meaning low country The early Spanish and Dutch modified its spelling to Bojnaj and also Bonaire French influence while present at various times was never strong enough to make the assumption that the name means good air 17 According to another theory the name might be derived from the Spanish phrase buen aire which does mean good air as the Spanish were the first Europeans to colonise the island 18 19 History Edit Traditional old houses with cactus fences preserved in the outdoor museum of Rincon Bonaire Original inhabitants Edit The most accurate human remains on the islands dating from 4500 B C were found in Curacao On different islands the most accurate are 4000 BP in Aruba and 3300 BP in Bonaire These individuals are currently called by the term Archaic Indians The Caquetio arawak Indians a clan having a place in the Arawak language family arrived at the islands from South America around 500 AD 20 Archeological remains of the Caquetio culture have been found at certain sites northeast of Kralendijk and near Lac Bay Caquetio rock paintings and petroglyphs have been preserved in caves at Spelonk Onima Ceru Pungi and Ceru Crita Cabai citation needed The Caquetios were apparently a very tall people for the Spanish name for the ABC islands was las Islas de los Gigantes or the islands of the giants 21 Spanish period Edit Main article Spanish West Indies In 1499 Alonso de Ojeda arrived in Curacao and a neighbouring island that was almost certainly Bonaire citation needed Ojeda was accompanied by Amerigo Vespucci and Juan de la Cosa citation needed De La Cosa s Mappa Mundi of 1500 shows Bonaire and calls it Isla do Palo Brasil or Island of Brazilwood citation needed The Spanish decided that the three ABC Islands were useless because they did not have known metal deposits and in 1515 the Caquetio were deported to work in the copper mines of Santo Domingo on the island of Hispaniola the total number may have been between 500 and 2000 22 21 23 Spain colonized Bonaire since 1499 for a period of approximately one century Likewise one of the oldest references to the name of the island is found in the archive of the Main Public Registry of the city of Caracas Venezuela A document dated December 9 1595 specifies that Don Francisco Montesinos Curate and Vicar of las Yslas de Curasao Aruba y Bonaire conferred a power of attorney to Pedro Gutierrez de Lugo resident in Caracas to collect from the Royal Treasury of His Catholic Majesty Don Felipe II the salary that corresponded to him for his office as priest and vicar of the islands Fort Oranje in Kralendijk built in 1639 Remnants of Bonaire s indigenous population can be seen in some of the island s current inhabitants In fact the majority of the population is of mixed black and white descent with minorities of Europeans descendants of the Dutch and Africans descendants of slaves In 1526 Juan Martinez de Ampies was appointed Spanish commander of the ABC Islands citation needed He brought back some of the original Caquetio Indian inhabitants to Bonaire and Curacao Ampies also imported domesticated animals from Spain including cows donkeys goats horses pigs and sheep The Spaniards thought that Bonaire could be used as a cattle plantation worked by natives The cattle were raised for hides rather than meat The Spanish inhabitants lived mostly in the inland town of Rincon which was safe from pirate attack 21 Dutch period Edit Main article Dutch Caribbean The Dutch West India Company was founded in 1621 Starting in 1623 ships of the West India Company called at Bonaire to obtain meat water and wood The Dutch also abandoned some Spanish and Portuguese prisoners there and these people founded the town of Antriol which is a contraction of Spanish al interior English inside The Dutch and the Spanish fought from 1568 to 1648 in what is now known as the Eighty Years War In 1633 the Dutch having lost the island of St Maarten to the Spanish retaliated by attacking Curacao Bonaire and Aruba Bonaire was conquered in March 1636 The Dutch built Fort Oranje in 1639 24 While Curacao emerged as a centre of the slave trade Bonaire became a plantation of the Dutch West India Company Salt became a major export product of the island a small number of African slaves were put to work alongside Indians and convicts cultivating dyewood and maize and harvesting solar salt around Blue Pan 25 26 Slave quarters built entirely of stone and too short for a man to stand upright in still stand in the area around Rincon and along the salt pans The slave population grew in the 1710s when a famine and social unrest on Curacao caused the Dutch to relocate a large number of slaves to Bonaire 27 Historically Dutch was not widely spoken on the island outside of colonial administration its use increased in the late 19th and early 20th centuries 28 Students on Curacao Aruba and Bonaire were taught predominantly in Spanish until the late 18th century when the British took Curacao Aruba and Bonaire the teaching of Spanish was restored when Dutch rule resumed in 1815 During the Napoleonic Wars the Netherlands lost control of Bonaire twice once from 1800 to 1803 and again from 1807 to 1816 27 29 During these intervals the British had control of the neighbouring island of Curacao and of Bonaire The ABC islands were returned to the Netherlands under the Anglo Dutch Treaty of 1814 During the period of British rule a large number of white traders settled on Bonaire and they built the settlement of Playa Kralendijk in 1810 Emancipation Edit From 1816 until 1868 Bonaire remained a government plantation In 1825 there were about 300 government owned slaves on the island Gradually many of the slaves were freed and became freemen with an obligation to render some services to the government The remaining slaves were freed on 30 September 1862 under the Emancipation Regulation A total of 607 government slaves and 151 private slaves were freed at that time 21 Slave huts World War II Edit During the German occupation of the Netherlands during World War II Bonaire was a protectorate of Britain and the United States The American army built the Flamingo Airport as an air force base After Germany invaded the Netherlands on May 10 1940 authorities declared Martial law and many German and Austrian citizens as well as Dutch thought to be German sympathizers were interned in a camp on Bonaire 30 Some of these remained in this camp for the war s duration and others were transferred to new camps that were built on the mainland in the first year of the war 31 32 33 In 1944 Princess Juliana and Eleanor Roosevelt visited the troops on Bonaire 21 Bonairean sailors made an above average contribution during World War II German U boats tried to eliminate shipping around the Aruba and Curacao refineries and thus eliminate the island s considerable fuel production for the Allies Bonairean crewed ships also took part in these battles Among the many missing after the war were the 34 Bonaireans who died on these ships more than on the other islands of the then Dutch West Indies During hostilities the site where the Divi Flamingo Beach Resort amp Casino now stands served as an internment camp for Germans and Austrians living in the Antilles mainly because they were distrusted There were fears they could have sabotaged the giant oil refineries on Aruba and Curacao that were supplying paraffin to the Allied air fleet The camp was in operation from 1940 to 1947 In total 461 people were interned during this period without trial most of them completely innocent Among them were Medardo de Marchena and also the photographer Fred Fischer then still an Austrian citizen Many German internees had just fled Nazi violence But there were also German prisoners of war some of whom remained after the war In September 1943 the father of George Maduro after whom Madurodam is named asked Queen Wilhelmina to exchange his son for the German internees on Bonaire The government did not grant the request After the war the empty barracks became Bonaire s first hotel Zeebad Royal visit of Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard in 1955 Post war Edit After the war the economy of Bonaire continued to develop The airport was converted to civilian use and the former internment camp was converted to become the first hotel on Bonaire 34 The Dutchman Pierre Schunck started a clothing factory known as Schunck s Kledingindustrie Bonaire a partial solution for the large female surplus on the island In 1964 Trans World Radio began broadcasting from Bonaire Radio Netherlands Worldwide built two shortwave transmitters on Bonaire in 1969 The second major hotel Bonaire Beach Hotel 35 was completed in 1962 Salt production resumed in 1966 when the salt pans were expanded and modernized by the Antilles International Salt Company a subsidiary of the International Salt Company Part of the facilities extend into the Caribbean Sea and form the popular dive site known as Salt Pier 36 The Bonaire Petroleum Corporation BOPEC oil terminal was opened in 1975 for trans shipping oil 37 Politically Bonaire formed part of the Netherlands Antilles from 1954 to 2010 it is now a special municipality within the Netherlands 14 In 2011 the island officially adopted the US dollar as its currency 38 Dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles Edit On 10 October 2010 the Netherlands Antilles was dissolved As a result the government of the Netherlands assumed the task of public administration of the Caribbean Netherlands or BES Islands comprising Bonaire St Eustatius and Saba The three islands acquired new status as special municipalities bijzondere gemeenten making them part of the Netherlands itself a form of public body openbaar lichaam as outlined in article 134 of the Dutch Constitution Special municipalities do not constitute part of a province As a special municipality Bonaire is very much like ordinary Dutch municipalities in that it has a mayor aldermen and a municipal council and is governed according to most Dutch laws Antillean legislation remained in force after 10 October 2010 with the exception of those cases where Antillean law was replaced by Bonaire s municipal law It was believed best for the island to not introduce the entire body of Dutch legislation at one time as it would cause confusion Therefore Dutch legislation is being introduced in stages Bonaire retained its own unique culture while residents enjoy the same rights as Dutch citizens including the right to vote in Dutch parliamentary elections in the Netherlands Residents also have access to new or improved facilities and government benefits including but not limited to universal health care improved health care facilities better educational facilities with additional training for teachers new teaching methods and new school buildings social housing for low income individuals and families a centrally dispatched single police force fire department and ambulance service 39 While the three islands are considered to be land of the Netherlands they are not a part of the European Union therefore not subject to European Union Law They are considered to be an overseas country and territory 40 Bonaire s non governmental organization Nos Ke Boneiru Bek We Want Bonaire Back is against the current constitutional relationship with the Netherlands With reference to Bonaire s 2004 referendum the organization is of the opinion that such an arrangement was never the choice of the people The Dutch Minister of Home Affairs and Kingdom Relations Ronald Plasterk replied to the organization confirming that only the Island Councils in the Caribbean Netherlands have the authority to decide on holding a constitutional referendum not the Dutch government In response the organization gathered more than 3 500 signatures in 2013 favouring a new referendum In a letter to minister Plasterk James Finies chairman of Nos Ke Boneiru Bek requested a new referendum under the right of self determination Plasterk responded by advising Finies that preparations for the evaluation of the public entity structure had begun for 2015 but a possible change of the constitutional relations is not part of that evaluation 41 The new referendum took place on 18 December 2015 42 65 of the turnout voted that they were not happy with the current relationship between Bonaire and the Netherlands 43 44 Geography EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bonaire news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Enlargeable detailed map of Bonaire Satellite image of Bonaire and the small island of Klein Bonaire Map of Bonaire 1914 1917Bonaire lies about 80 kilometres 50 mi off the coast of Venezuela on the continental shelf of South America and is thus geologically considered a part of the continent Geologists believe that Bonaire was formed relatively recently As the nearby continental shelf now located near Montserrat and the cause of the volcanic activity on that island moved through the area it forced a large mass of rock to the ocean surface and created the islands of the Lesser and Greater Antilles including Bonaire As the seabed rose a vast coral reef grew on what is now dry land These corals were eventually exposed to air and perished becoming surface limestone deposits over the millennia 45 Vast amounts of coral skeletons may be seen along the shoreline and across the interior of Bonaire The island is essentially a coral reef that has been geologically pushed up and out of the sea This also resulted in the natural fringing reef system seen today in which the coral formations start at the shoreline Tidal variations are only about 55 60 centimetres 1 8 2 0 ft so the corals start at the low tide line and continue on following the underwater topology of the island s base Bonaire s tides are more affected by a combination of wind and low high pressure systems than by the moon 45 The northern end of the island is relatively mountainous although its highest peak Brandaris is only 240 metres 790 feet The southern part of the island is nearly flat and barely rises above sea level A significant portion of this southern region is covered with sea water in process of evaporation for salt production This area also contains Lac Bay with its large mangrove forest The shoreline of Bonaire is dotted with lagoons and inlets the largest of which is Goto Lake in the north These lagoons and wetlands provide an excellent habitat for a wide variety of shorebirds 45 Klein Bonaire the small island in the sheltered lee of Bonaire has the same geological history While Bonaire has some hills and variations in altitude Klein Bonaire s surface is quite level and just a few feet above high tide Because the island is as yet undeveloped the fringing reef system surrounding Klein Bonaire is truly pristine The smaller island is entirely ringed with dive sites 45 Bonaire has a land area of 288 km2 111 sq mi while Klein Bonaire is an additional 6 km2 2 3 sq mi Washington Slagbaai National Park is an ecological preserve on the north side of the island The highest point of Bonaire Mount Brandaris is 240 m 790 ft tall and is located within this preserve It has a complete view of the island Climate Edit Bonaire has a warm dry though humid and windy climate The average temperature is 27 5 C 81 5 F with a 1 4 C 2 5 F seasonal variation and 5 6 C 10 F daily variation The ocean temperature around the island fluctuates between 26 and 30 C 78 and 86 F The highest recorded temperature is 35 8 C 96 4 F and the lowest 19 8 C 67 6 F Nearly constant winds blow from the east with an average speed of 22 kilometres per hour 12 kn 46 The humidity is very constant averaging 76 and fluctuating between 85 and 66 on a daily basis Average annual rainfall is 520 millimetres 20 5 in most of which occurs in October through January 46 Bonaire lies outside the hurricane belt though its weather and oceanic conditions are occasionally affected by hurricanes and tropical storms This semi arid climate is conducive to a variety of cacti and other desert plants Ecology Edit Rock hind in Bonaire Bonaire is fringed by a coral reef which is accessible to divers from the shore along the lee side of the island facing west southwest The entire coastline of the island was designated a marine sanctuary in 1979 an effort to preserve and protect the delicate coral reef and the marine life that depends on it There are more than 350 species of fish 47 and sixty species of coral living in Bonaire s reef 48 Boulder Star Coral Montastraea annularis is the most common coral according to a 2011 survey 49 In 2011 biologists discovered a new species of jellyfish in Bonaire the highly venomous Bonaire banded box jellyfish Tamoya ohboya Bonaire is also famed for its flamingo populations and its donkey sanctuary Flamingos are drawn to the brackish water of the island s lagoons which harbors the shrimp upon which they feed Bonaire is home to one of only four nesting grounds for the Caribbean flamingo Located in the Pekelmeer in the southern part of the island no human entry is permitted in this sanctuary 50 In the 16th century Europeans introduced sheep goats pigs horses and donkeys on Bonaire and the descendants of the donkeys goats and pigs roam the island today Bonaire is also home to the ecologically vulnerable yellow shouldered amazon parrot Amazona barbadensis 51 Environmental initiatives Edit A donkey colonyThe island of Bonaire has long been a leader in nature conservation and ecological responsibility The national park foundation Stichting Nationale Parken STINAPA was founded in 1962 for the purpose of actively protecting nature on the island In 1969 STINAPA succeeded in establishing both the flamingo nesting sanctuary and Washington National Park the first such nature preserves in the Caribbean In 1979 the Slagbaai plantation was added to the park now known as Washington Slagbaai National Park WSNP The Bonaire National Marine Park BNMP was also established in 1979 52 The Marine Park consists of the whole coastline of Bonaire from the high water mark down to a depth of 200 feet 61 m and includes a large mangrove forest in Lac Bay 53 Lac Bay Klein Bonaire Pelkermeer Slagbaai and Gotomeer are recognized as wetlands of international significance under the Ramsar Convention 54 Due to a public private sector partnership programs are being developed to advance the local awareness and attitudes toward conservation and habitat preservation in order to proactively protect Bonaire s ecosystem A new sewage treatment plant will contribute to protecting the reefs and the seawater quality In March 2013 Selibon NV 55 the national garbage processing plant opened an environmental court where the general public can bring glass cans paper scrap metal cardboard batteries motor oil cooking oil electronics mobile phones and textiles The island is environmentally aware and protective of its coral reefs the diversity of its aquatic ecosystems and the conservation of its many species and natural environments above and below the water The island s government businesses and residents are committed to recycling waste products and making others aware of the importance and benefits 55 Divers and dive shops take part in collecting debris washed ashore and preparing it for recycling 55 Bonaire gets a significant amount of its electricity from an array of twelve wind generators along its northeastern coastline which began operating in 2010 This renewable source now fills 40 45 of the island s electricity needs Work continues in developing additional renewable sources of energy including bio diesel and solar with the goal of becoming 100 reliant on renewables 56 57 Washington Slagbaai National Park Edit Washington Slagbaai National Park The entire northern tip of Bonaire is a protected nature reserve the Washington Slagbaai National Park The 6000 hectare park was established in 1969 as the first nature park in the Netherlands Antilles It is home to a wide variety of habitats such as the bocas inlets dunes on the north coast salt pans pos springs and mountain areas The park is rich in birds and other animals especially lizards including iguanas Within the park there are two areas recognised internationally as important wetlands under the Ramsar Convention the Slagbaai salt marsh and Lake Gotom The park is also of great cultural historical importance not least because of the plantations and the history of Slagbaai At the entrance to the park is the Bonaire Museum From the entrance there are several signposted walks The park is easily accessible by car and mountain bikers are also welcome Bonaire National Marine Park Edit The Bonaire National Marine Park is a legally protected underwater park surrounding the entire island and Klein Bonaire The park was established in 1979 with the support of the World Wide Fund for Nature and others and is managed by the Foundation of National Parks Bonaire STINAPA Bonaire Off the coast is the island of Klein Bonaire There are about sixty dive sites citation needed Klein Bonaire Edit Coast of Klein Bonaire Off the coast of Kralendijk lies the island of Klein Bonaire The island is 700 hectares in size completely flat and only covered with small bushes and cacti There are at least 76 species of plants and about 55 species of animals on the island It is surrounded by a coral reef The beaches on the north and west side are the most important nesting sites for sea turtles There are also several salt pans or salt lakes on the island Red flamingos feed there Bonaire has one of the largest flamingo populations in the world For this reason and for the pristine coral reefs and sea turtle nesting beaches the island is protected as a wetland of international importance by the Ramsar Convention With the growth of diving tourism on Bonaire project developers wanted to build hotels on Klein Bonaire Just before the turn of the century the island was bought and safeguarded by the Island Territory of Bonaire with the help of the Netherlands the World Wide Fund for Nature and other conservationists Since 2001 Klein Bonaire has been a legally protected nature reserve The island is accessible by boat for divers snorkellers and day trippers Lac Edit The Lac lake is a shallow lagoon in the southeast of Bonaire The 700 hectare area is surrounded by mangroves The lake is part of the protected underwater park and has been designated an aquatic area of international importance under the Ramsar Convention The bay is unique for the presence of seagrasses and mangroves Part of the mangroves is virtually undisturbed due to limited accessibility making it important as a resting area for bird species Lac is an important resting and nesting area for many marine birds and invertebrates including the queen conch or Karko This mollusk used to be found in large numbers here but overfishing has largely eradicated the population The area serves as a nursery for reef fish and is the feeding ground for the green sea turtle Pekelmeer Edit Pekel Lake and the flamingo reserve 800 hectares are part of the large aquatic area in the south west of the island Salt is still extracted from this area It is also the most important feeding and living area for the flamingo Depending on the season between 2000 and 7000 flamingos can be found in this area The flamingo reserve is the most important breeding site in the Southern Caribbean The total population migrating between Bonaire and South America is estimated at 20 000 individuals The flamingo places special demands on its environment water quality tranquillity and is very sensitive to disturbance The Pekelmeer and the flamingo reserve have been designated as a water area of international importance under the Ramsar Convention Bonaire will continue to actively protect the flamingo the symbol of the island Salt pans and caves Edit Cargill Salt Bonaire Salt pans are salt lakes or inlets that are closed to the sea by a dead coral dyke They have an important function because they ensure the collection and filtration of rain water This prevents nutrients and soil particles from reaching the reef and causing damage to the corals This function is especially crucial during heavy rainfall The salt pans are also an important feeding ground for many waterbirds Slagbaai Gotomeer Pekelmeer and the Klein Bonaire salt pans are aquatic areas of international importance in the context of the Ramsar Convention Bonaire has many dozens of caves As a geological manifestation they give a picture of the oldest history of the island In several places the caves have cave drawings made by the original inhabitants of Bonaire Some caves are home to bats or the blind shrimp Typhlatya 58 Bats play a useful role in the ecosystem they trap a large number of insects including mosquitoes or provide pollination of flowers including cactus flowers The greatest threat to bats is the destruction or disturbance of their roosts Geology Edit Bonaire lies on the Caribbean Plate a tectonic plate bounded by four other tectonic plates the North American Plate the Cocos Plate the Nazca Plate and the South American Plate Bonaire as an island was formed in the Tertiary when the Caribbean plate boundary the volcanic arc that formed the Caribbean islands to the east shifted eastward The geology of Bonaire is dominated by gently dipping carbonate rocks ranging in age from Cretaceous 90 100 million years ago Ma to Miocene 5 Ma which lie unconformably on a pre Cretaceous igneous basement Where the unconformity corresponds with sea level erosion caves are common Government Edit The local parliament and Council House in Kralendijk 2010 referendum Edit Prior to the 2010 referendum the Netherlands Antilles comprising the islands of Curacao Bonaire St Eustatius St Maarten and Saba were governed as a parliamentary democracy based on the Dutch system of government with free elections held every four years Dissension about their political future resulted in four of the five islands advocating for separation from the Netherlands Antilles Some of the island residents wanted autonomy while others wanted more integration 59 In 2005 a conference was held by the governments of the Netherlands Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles to discuss future constitutional reform and the dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles In 2006 Sint Maarten and Curacao chose autonomy and Bonaire St Eustatius and Saba opted for a closer relationship with the Netherlands Constitutional referendums and dismantlement of the Netherlands Antilles was scheduled to take place in 2010 60 61 Bonaire s announced referendum scheduled for 26 March 2010 was canceled in February 2010 The governor of the Dutch Antilles Frits Goedgedrag decided to cancel it because it probably contravened international law since part of the population was barred from voting European Dutch nationals were only allowed to vote if they arrived on the island before 1 January 2007 62 63 The referendum was postponed to September and then October 2010 64 Eventually the referendum was held on 17 December 2010 with 84 voting in favor of becoming part of the Netherlands However as the 35 voter turnout rate was below the required 51 the results of the referendum were declared invalid 65 Judicial Institution and Prison Edit The Judicial Institution JI of the Dutch Caribbean Justitiele Inrichting Caribisch Nederland based on Bonaire is located in Kralendijk Since 10 October 2010 the centre has been under the responsibility of the Department of Judicial Institutions DJI the agency of the Dutch Ministry of Justice and Security for the execution of sentences and custodial measures The Bonaire site is both a House of Detention and a Judicial Institution Since 6 December 2010 there is capacity for 76 men women and juveniles The name in Papiamento is Institushon Hudisial Karibe Hulandes Boneiru site Economy EditSee also Economy of the Netherlands A proportional representation of Bonaire exports 2019 American flamingos at the sanctuary at the southern end of Bonaire Tourism Edit Bonaire s economy is mainly based on tourism taking advantage of its warm dry climate and natural environment The island caters to scuba divers and snorkelers as the surrounding coral reefs are well preserved and easily accessible from the shore Bonaire has been widely recognized for many years in the diving community as one of the world s best shore diving destinations 66 Bonaire s Marine Park offers a total of 86 named dive sites and is home to over 57 species of soft and stony coral and more than 350 recorded fish species 67 Most resorts and hotels have an on site dive shop and other accommodations are affiliated with a dive operation The license plates carry the logo Diver s Paradise in English 68 Lac Bay in the southeastern part of the island attracts wind surfers from around the world to Bonaire The shallow Bay is on the windward side of the island so trade winds are strong and constant A barrier reef across the mouth of the bay allows windsurfers of all skill levels to select wave conditions they like Lac Bay is one of the stops in the PWA Windsurfing Freestyle World Cup and has hosted the Prokids IFCA Championship Five of the PWA s ten highest ranked freestyle windsurfers are from Bonaire Kiri Thode Amado Vrieswijk Bjorn Saragoza Tonky Frans and Taty Frans 69 In the northern end of Lac Bay is one of the best preserved mangrove forests in the Caribbean which is popular for kayaking and snorkelling 70 Sunset In Bonaire Bonaire is also a port of call for more than fifteen cruise lines who make more than eighty calls per season at the island The total passenger capacity for cruise ships in Bonaire is about 185 000 71 Tourism infrastructure in Bonaire is contemporary and offers a variety of types of accommodations including hotels full service resorts a few small bed and breakfasts and self catering vacation rentals of all kinds Other tourist activities include kite boarding windsurfing mountain biking hiking sailing charter fishing boating and bird watching 72 All in all tourist expenditures in Bonaire are estimated at 125 million per year 73 Currency Edit In 2011 the BES Islands replaced their currency the Netherlands Antillean guilder ISO 4217 ANG symbol ƒ with the US dollar rather than replacing it with the euro which is used in the European Netherlands The decision was based primarily on the needs for tourism and trade Most countries and territories in the Caribbean use the dollar as their currency or have a currency linked to the dollar as legal tender The guilder was pegged to the US dollar for decades with an exchange rate of ƒ1 79 US 1 00 Adopting the dollar put an end to the dual currency payment system and foreign exchange charges 74 The guilder remained in use in Curacao and Sint Maarten Taxes Edit The separate tax regimes for Bonaire St Eustatius and Saba present a greater risk of double taxation or double exemption from taxes In an effort to remove the risk two plans were introduced One plan prevents double taxation between the Netherlands Europe and the BES Islands while the other prevents double taxation between the BES Islands and third countries The new regime will generate a total annual tax revenue estimated at 52 million which is equal to the current tax revenues on the three islands The combined population of the three Islands is approximately 20 000 with about half that many being income taxpayers 39 Salt production Edit Utilizing the naturally low lying geography and traditional Dutch dike design much of Bonaire s southern half has been made into a giant system of ponds and pools which evaporate seawater to produce salt Presently operated by Cargill Bonaire s solar salt works produces 400 000 tons of industrial grade salt per year After collection the salt is then washed and stored in pyramid shaped piles roughly 50 feet in height each containing approximately 10 000 metric tons of 99 6 percent pure salt 75 The salt facility operates its own pier where ships are loaded with salt destined for North American European and Western Pacific markets Bonaire s salt is used primarily in industry 76 Bonaire Salt Pier The large condensing ponds which ring the crystallizer basins called the Pekelmeer are a natural habitat for numerous species of brine shrimp which in turn feed flocks of hundreds of pink flamingoes and other migratory birds This is the location of Bonaire s flamingo sanctuary Oil storage and shipment Edit The Bonaire Petroleum Corporation BOPEC is a fuel oil storage and transshipment terminal on Bonaire BOPEC is wholly owned by Venezuelan oil company PDVSA and functions primarily as a storage facility for multiple grades of refined and non refined oils from Venezuela and refineries on Curacao and Aruba BOPEC also has mixing and blending capabilities for its stored fuels BOPEC s 1 pier can receive tankers up to 500 000DWT 77 which means there are only seven ships in the world that are too big for the BOPEC terminal 78 A fire at the BOPEC terminal in 2010 is believed to have had a significant impact on Goto Lake and at least one other nearby lagoon 79 Plantations and plantation houses Edit In 1868 and 1870 a large part of the government land was auctioned and sold These included five lots for forestry and livestock farming and nine lots for salt exploitation The buyers of these large lots were mainly wealthy people from Curacao successful merchants who had no intention of living on their plantations There are no real plantations on Bonaire The climate and soil conditions on Bonaire are not very favourable for the cultivation of fruits and vegetables of any size Only salt extraction is economically attractive In addition on some plantations aloe cultivation last exported in 1973 maize cultivation due to drought there was not enough harvest every year charcoal burning and cattle breeding mainly goats last exported in 1970 were carried out In the early 20th century Bonaire s middle class was also able to buy plantation land On Curacao the land house served as the main house of a plantation where the owner lived In the immediate vicinity were outbuildings barns stables and corrals Surrounding it were the slave dwellings On Bonaire the plantation houses became the owners cottages where they stayed during the weekends Often during the week there was an overseer vito who supervised the work on the plantation Transportation Edit Flamingo Airport Bonaire s first airport was located near Tra i Montana Subi Blanku and crossed the current path of Kralendijk to Rincon and was built in 1936 The airport proved to be too small when American soldiers arrived on Bonaire in the second half of 1943 The commander stated that a new airport had to be built Construction began in December 1943 with the new Flamingo Airport opening in 1945 A small terminal was built that was suitable for the number of passengers at the time This building was used until mid 1976 The airport had received many extensions of both the runway and the terminal itself Today the airport is known as Flamingo International Airport and is served by a variety of both domestic and international airlines Services from the US include Delta Air Lines American Airlines and United Airlines Airlines providing European service include TUI Netherlands and KLM Consistent air service from Curacao is available through Divi Divi Air and EZ Air The airport is equipped with a fire station control tower and hangar Plans are underway for modifications to the current airport facilities runway and the fire station Settlements Edit Bonaire coast The two towns on the island are Kralendijk the capital and Rincon Kralendijk has many suburbs neighbourhoods although on an island with such a small population the distinction is not always clearcut The town of Kralendijk is a result of a merger of five villages Antriol Entrejol Nikiboko Noord Salina Playa and Tera Kora The town of Rincon is the only other town 80 Labra Ishiri Kokorobi Jan Doran Vlijt Rigot Porto Spano and Kunchi were several smaller towns that had existed in the national park but were later abandoned Demography EditThe population is estimated to be 20 104 in 2019 Most of its inhabitants are of African descent or mixed race the product of European and African intermarriage for whom the term mulatto is often used However a significant part of the population has a variety of origins including the Netherlands Dominican Republic Venezuela Colombia Suriname and the United States among others Age Sex Pyramid 2016 Bonaire Main population centres Edit St Louis Bertrand a Catholic church in Rincon BonaireThe star on Bonaire s flag has six points representing the six original settlements Due to population growth and building expansion five of them have grown together with the capital Kralendijk Only Rincon the oldest settlement on the island located in the northern half remained an independent village In addition to these nuclei a number of new districts have been added over the years Behind Kralendijk against the hill are the Republiek and Santa Barbara districts Behind Santa Barbara on the coast is the luxurious new district of Sabadeco Santa Barbara Development Corporation Beyond the airport in the direction of the salt flats is the neighbourhood of Belnem named after Harry Belafonte The population of as 2017 is distributed in the old towns and districts as follows 81 Kralendijk with a total of 10 620 inhabitants 81 Playa centre of Kralendijk with 2 571 inhabitants 81 Tera Kora with 1 568 inhabitants 81 Nikiboko with 3 058 inhabitants 81 Antriol with 3 811 inhabitants 81 Nort di Salina with 1 217 inhabitants 81 Rincon with 1 875 inhabitants 81 Religion Edit Bonaire is predominantly Roman Catholic 68 and there are also Protestant minorities 82 As in the rest of the former Netherlands Antilles the predominant religion in Bonaire is Christianity with the Catholic Church being especially important Although the island passed from the rule of Catholic Spain to the Protestant Netherlands Catholicism remained the principal island religion Ecclesiastically the churches on Bonaire depend on the Catholic diocese of Willemstad on the neighboring island of Curacao After the discovery of Bonaire by Alonso de Ojeda in 1499 the spiritual life of the Christians was in the hands of the monks who came from Venezuela for baptisms These missionaries belonged to the Jesuits of the Franciscan order The first resident priest was Jacob Bernardus Eisenbel Dutch who came from Aruba to settle for several years in Bonaire and after whom the Parish of St Bernard the main Catholic church of the capital of Bonaire Kralendijk is named Rincon Bonaire s second largest city offers numerous regular festivals including the annual Simadan harvest festivals and Dia di San Juan St John s Day Religion in Bonaire 2014 82 Roman Catholic 68 Protestant 16 Other religion 4 No denomination 12 Bonaire also has an Islamic centre and a Jewish community 83 Education Edit Bonaire s educational system is patterned after the Dutch system Early grades are taught solely in Papiamento with more and more Dutch being introduced as the grade level progresses Scholengemeenschap Bonaire serves as Bonaire s secondary school for ages 12 18 84 Languages Edit As Bonaire is part of the Netherlands Dutch is the official language and the sole language for all administration and legal matters 85 However as at 2017 it is the main language of only 15 of the population around two thirds use the creole language of Papiamento as their main language 86 In the 2001 census Dutch was the main language of only 8 8 of the population 87 The most widely spoken language was Papiamento the primary language of 74 7 of the populace and is recognized by the government 5 87 Spanish was the main language of 11 8 of the people English the primary language of 2 8 and other languages accounted for 1 8 87 Bonaire is a polyglot society with most of Bonaire s population able to converse in at least two of the languages of Papiamento Dutch English and Spanish Sports Edit Kralendijk Stadium After Renovations Bonaire residents participate in numerous sporting events including all the popular sports that attract tourists to the island such as scuba diving sailing fishing boating windsurfing kite surfing biking baseball association football volleyball and tennis There are multiple dive shops on Bonaire most of which offer scuba instruction and PADI NAUI SSI and CMAS certification 88 The island s dive shops typically offer scuba tank and dive gear rental boat diving excursions snorkeling kayaking and naturalist classes Some dive shops have gas blending stations and offer tec diving instruction and excursions 89 Bonaire hosted the PWA Bonaire World Cup 2014 and the 10th Prokids IFCA Championship 2014 at Lac Bay in Sorobon on the east side of the island 90 It is home to several professional windsurfing champions 91 The island is also home to the annual Bonaire Sailing Regatta a national sailing competition and celebration that has been held every October in Playa 92 The event first began in 1967 when Captain Don Stewart challenged Hubert Domacasse to a race wagering 27 cases of beer that his fishing boat Sislin was faster than Domacasse s fishing boat Velia 93 The races are run between the leeward side of the island and Klein Bonaire 94 The Bonaire Football Federation is a member of CONCACAF and the Bonaire Volleyball Federation is an associate member of CAZOVA Caribbean Zonal Volleyball Association and NORCECA The Baseball teams play in the Caribbean region of Little league and Pony league Bonaire was also confirmed as the 218th Table Tennis National association 95 Media EditRadio Edit Trans World Radio TWR first established its AM broadcasting site on the island of Bonaire in 1964 to broadcast Christian programs into Latin America and the Caribbean 96 The programs were broadcast in Spanish Dutch and English 97 TWR Bonaire began their operation with three transmitters including a Brown Boveri medium wave transmitter 500 kW over 800 kHz and two shortwave transmitters 200 kW and 50 kW however their license to operate the 500 kW transmitter was revoked in 1999 thereby restricting broadcast to 100 kW The Brown Boveri medium wave transmitter was sold and removed from the island It was replaced with another medium wave transmitter PJB3 AM 97 In 2012 TWR Bonaire was permitted to increase its power from 100 kW to 450 kW but in order to do so they had to raise 38 million euros US 43 456 610 00 In 2016 they commissioned Kintronic Labs to build a four mast 231 metres 758 ft parallel array directional antenna system On January 31 2018 they acquired a 450 kW Nautel Broadcast medium wave transmitter for US 3 8 million and the name changed from Trans World Radio to Shine 800 AM 97 Bonaire is a popular tourist destination for both recreational diving and shore snorkelling Radio Netherlands Worldwide operated a shortwave relay station at 12 12 48 N 68 19 23 W 12 21333 N 68 32306 W 12 21333 68 32306 Radio Netherlands Bonaire Radio Relay Station Because of widespread availability of internet links providing higher audio quality and more flexibility shortwave broadcasts by RNW Bonaire were discontinued 98 and at the end of October 2012 the radio station was closed and installations dismantled Bonaire has two island radio stations that broadcast general information Bon FM and Radiodifucion Boneriano The language spoken for both is Papiamento 99 Internet and newspapers Edit There are several internet news sources including BES Reporter in English Bonaire in Papiamento and Dutch Bonaire Nieuws in Dutch and Info Bonaire in English The local newspapers some of which are also available online include The Bonaire Reporter in English Extra and Boneriano in Papiamento Bonaire Times in English Spanish and Dutch 100 and two Dutch newspapers Amigoe and Antilliaans Dagblad 99 Television Edit Flamingo Television Bonaire B V offers cable programming and internet access via cable connection or fiber optics Local and regional programming is offered in different languages including Papiamento Spanish Dutch and Chinese English channels are made available through the efforts of a unified group of cable companies comprising the Caribbean Cable Cooperative Ltd 101 Digital television programs and internet access are offered by Telbo N V a communication and media provider with an IP based infrastructure They are the primary telephone service provider and also offer various packages of high quality digital television programs with 130 digital channels 102 Residents of Bonaire receive some of Venezuela s main national television channels all primarily in Spanish Symbols EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Flag Edit The flag with the six pointed star symbolises a compass The people of Bonaire were and are excellent fishermen and sailors It is also said that the four points of the ring indicating East West South and North are intended to indicate that all people in the world are equal regardless of where they come from The red colour refers to the blood and the survivability of the people of Bonaire Yellow represents the sun the beach and the flowers of the Kibrahachi and the cactus White represents peace and internationalisation Blue represents the sea The flag has not existed for a long time It was only on 11 December 1981 that the design was approved to which the whole population was able to contribute and give its opinion See also Edit Caribbean portal Netherlands portalNotes Edit bq is designated but not in use for the Caribbean Netherlands 6 7 Like the rest of the Netherlands nl is primarily in use References Edit Welkom Openbaar Lichaam Bonaire Archived from the original on 2020 04 17 Retrieved 2018 10 01 How has the population evolved over the past decade the Caribbean Netherlands in numbers 2022 CBS a b Ministerie van Algemene Zaken May 19 2015 Waaruit bestaat het Koninkrijk der Nederlanden www rijksoverheid nl CBS Statline opendata cbs nl a b Papiamentu can be used in relations with the government Invoeringswet openbare lichamen Bonaire Sint Eustatius en Saba in Dutch wetten nl Retrieved 14 October 2012 BQ Bonaire Sint Eustatius and Saba ISO Archived from the original on 17 June 2016 Retrieved 29 August 2014 Delegation Record for BQ IANA 20 December 2010 Archived from the original on 29 May 2012 Retrieved 30 December 2010 Bonaire Dictionary com Mangold Max Duden Das Ausspracheworterbuch In Der Duden in zwolf Banden Band 6 7 Auflage Berlin Dudenverlag Mannheim Institut fur Deutsche Sprache 2015 Seite 242 Map of Bonaire Caribbean Islands Maps and Guides 2015 12 18 Retrieved 2019 03 20 The Caribbean Netherlands in Numbers 2022 History Klein Bonaire Stinapa Bonaire 2014 10 10 Archived from the original on 2018 06 14 Retrieved 2018 06 14 Antillen opgeheven NOS Nieuws 18 November 2009 Archived from the original on 24 December 2009 Retrieved 10 October 2010 a b c Wet openbare lichamen Bonaire Sint Eustatius en Saba Law on the public bodies of Bonaire Sint Eustatius and Saba Dutch Government in Dutch Retrieved 14 October 2010 Kingdom of the Netherlands DEF PDF Retrieved 2017 06 13 Population Caribbean Netherlands stable CBS 2016 07 21 Retrieved 2018 06 13 Elly A Bonaire s History InfoBonaire Seco Manuel 2012 Estudios de linguistica espanola homenaje a Manuel Seco in Spanish Universidad de Alicante ISBN 978 84 9717 183 0 Treasury United States Department of the 1895 Treasury Decisions Under Customs and Other Laws U S Government Printing Office Buurt Gerard Van 2011 01 01 Conservation Of Amphibians And Reptiles In Aruba Curacao And Bonaire Conservation of Caribbean Island Herpetofaunas Volume 1 Conservation Biology and the Wider Caribbean BRILL 145 159 doi 10 1163 ej 9789004183957 i 228 49 ISBN 978 90 04 19407 6 retrieved 2021 04 22 a b c d e Van Der Helm Rien 1987 Traveler s Handbook Bonaire Rijswik The Netherlands Elmar Media Service ISBN 978 90 6120 635 4 Lopez Barry 1996 Searching for Depth in Bonaire The Georgia Review 50 3 545 558 ISSN 0016 8386 JSTOR 41401267 Anderson Cordova Karen F 2017 5 muse jhu edu book 51283 Surviving Spanish Conquest Indian Fight Flight and Cultural Transformation in Hispaniola and Puerto Rico The University of Alabama Press p 137 ISBN 978 0 8173 9090 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Check url value help nl Fort Oranje Bonaire circular reference Kennedy Cynthia M 2007 The Other White Gold Salt Slaves the Turks and Caicos Islands and British Colonialism The Historian 69 2 218 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6563 2007 00178 x ISSN 0018 2370 JSTOR 24453659 S2CID 144807834 Misevich Phil Mann Kristin Silva Daniel B Domingues da Richardson David Vos Jelmer Mann Kristin 2016 muse jhu edu book 83663 The Rise and Demise of Slavery and the Slave Trade in the Atlantic World University of Rochester Press p 76 ISBN 978 1 78204 656 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a Check url value help a b VAN WELIE RIK 2008 Slave Trading and Slavery in the Dutch Colonial Empire A Global Comparison NWIG New West Indian Guide Nieuwe West Indische Gids 82 1 2 47 96 doi 10 1163 13822373 90002465 ISSN 1382 2373 JSTOR 43390702 S2CID 128869753 Dede pikina ku su bisina Papiamentu Nederlands en de onverwerkt verleden tijd van Putte Florimon 1999 Zutphen de Walburg Pers The Map Room Caribbean Bonaire British Empire Retrieved 10 October 2010 van der Horst Liesbeth 2004 Wereldoorlog in de West Suriname de Nederlandse Antillen en Aruba 1940 1945 in Dutch Hilversum Verloren pp 69 74 ISBN 9789065507945 Anonymous 15 June 2007 Imprisoned Innocents PDF Bonaire Reporter p 7 Archived from the original PDF on 8 July 2011 Retrieved 19 February 2009 Sint Jago Junnes E 2007 Wuiven vanaf de waranda in Dutch Utrecht Gopher ISBN 9789051794960 OCLC 150262823 Captain Esther 2010 De interneringen in Suriname en de Nederlandse Antillen Oorlogserfgoed overzee de erfenis van de Tweede Wereldoorlog in Aruba Curacao Indonesie en Suriname in Dutch Amsterdam Bakker ISBN 9789035135840 Divi Flamingo Beach Resort Bonaire Retrieved 19 February 2009 Bonaire Beach Hotel Retrieved 19 February 2009 Cargill Salt Company Retrieved 19 February 2009 Bonaire Petroleum Company Archived from the original on 2007 03 01 Retrieved 19 February 2009 Introduction of the dollar on Bonaire Saint Eustace Saba 18 May 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2019 a b New Constitutional Order Caribbean Parts of the Kingdom Government of the Netherlands April 22 2013 Archived from the original on July 29 2012 Retrieved December 7 2014 Bonaire Saint Eustatius and Saba DS World s Lands Archived from the original on February 28 2013 Retrieved December 7 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Dutch Minister Plasterk Constitutional Referendum BES is Island Affair Government News Bearing Point Caribbean August 18 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 12 11 Retrieved December 7 2014 Referendum bill Archived 2015 12 23 at the Wayback Machine government of Bonaire 9 October 2015 Posthumus Niels 19 December 2015 Bonaire stemt tegen huidige band met Nederland NRC Retrieved 13 March 2016 The Conference on the Political Future of the Dutch Administered Caribbean Having met at Bonaire West Indies on 1st December 2016 St Martin News Network 15 December 2016 a b c d Bonaire s Maps InfoBonaire 2017 06 03 Retrieved 2017 06 13 a b Bonaire s Weather provided by KNMI InfoBonaire 2017 06 03 Retrieved 2017 06 13 Bonaire divers paradise Diving Bonaire Official Tourism Site www tourismbonaire com STINAPA Bonaire National Marine Park Jekielek P 2011 A BLAGRRA Assessment of Coral Bleaching and Disease in Bonaire In Pollock NW ed Diving for Science 2011 Proceedings of the American Academy of Underwater Sciences 30th Symposium Dauphin Island AL AAUS 2011 Archived from the original on 23 May 2013 Retrieved 16 April 2013 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Caribbean Flamingo Rivera Milan Frank F Simal Fernando Bertuol Paulo Boomer G Scott 2018 Population monitoring and modelling of yellow shouldered parrot on Bonaire Caribbean Netherlands Wildlife Biology 2018 1 1 12 doi 10 2981 wlb 00384 S2CID 92045802 Retrieved 29 September 2020 STINAPA Bonaire National Parks Foundation STINAPA Bonaire National Marine Park STINAPA Bonaire National Marine Park a b c Welcome Bon bini BONHATA Bunker Kaitlyn 2015 01 07 Caribbean Island Says Goodbye Fossil Fuels Hello 100 Renewable Electricity Retrieved 23 March 2015 Solar pilot project at Barcadera Bonaire Curacao Chronicle curacaochronicle com 2014 01 20 Botello Alejandro Iliffe Thomas M Alvarez Fernando Juan Carlos Pons Joan Jaume Damia 2013 Lambshead John ed Historical biogeography and phylogeny of Typhlatya cave shrimps Decapoda Atyidae based on mitochondrial and nuclear data Journal of Biogeography 40 3 594 607 doi 10 1111 jbi 12020 hdl 10261 99923 S2CID 62838926 Martin W Lewis March 22 2011 The Little Noticed Dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles Geopolitics Caribbean GeoCurrents Retrieved December 7 2014 Frank Kunneman Mark Kater May 2009 Guide to Doing Business on Bonaire PDF Doing Business Guides VanEps Kunneman VanDoorne Archived from the original PDF on December 14 2014 Retrieved December 7 2014 Barry Guimbellot Ruth Guimbellot Exploring Bonaire Adventure From Sea to Shore Dive Training Retrieved December 7 2014 Uncertainty about Bonaire referendum Archived 2012 10 16 at the Wayback Machine Radio Netherlands 2 February 2010 Bonaire referendum cancelled Expatica com Retrieved 10 October 2010 Bonaire referendum postponed again Archived 2011 01 19 at the Wayback Machine Radio Netherlands 10 August 2010 The Referendum that wasn t Archived 2011 07 08 at the Wayback Machine Bonaire Reporter 24 December 2010 Scuba Diving Top 100 Best Dive Sites for Shore Diving Scuba Diving Bonaire Dive Sites Bonaire Official Tourism Site www tourismbonaire com Bonaire License Plate Flickr April 4 2007 Professional Windsurfing Association PWA PWA WORLD WINDSURFING TOUR Freestyle Men The Mangrove Info Center Bonaire Dutch Caribbean Archived from the original on 2015 03 03 Retrieved 2015 04 23 Update on Cruise and Stay Over arrivals www tourismbonaire com Bonaire Activities InfoBonaire 2017 06 03 Retrieved 2017 06 13 IVM Institute for Environmental Studies The Tourism Value of Nature on Bonaire permanent dead link 2012 Frequently Asked Questions Why Have the BES Islands Decided on the US dollar Caribisch Nederland De Nederlandsche Bank Retrieved December 7 2014 Micallef Joseph April 18 2019 The Surprising Story of Bonaire s Salt Pyramids Forbes Retrieved 28 November 2019 Cargill Salt Bonaire N V Solar Salt Works wikimapia org Rocargo Services N V www rocargo com Harry Cassin 2013 08 28 The Top Ten Largest Oil Tankers Ever Built Petro Global News Follow up study on the chemical status of Lake Goto Bonaire Measurements and risk assessment Archived 2015 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure and the Environment I amp M De Dorpen op Bonaire Bonaire Paradise in Dutch Retrieved 2 May 2021 a b c d e f g h Bonaire bevolkingscijfers per buurt Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek in Dutch 2017 Retrieved 2 May 2021 Sum of Entrejol Antriol Nikiboko Noord Salina Playa and Tera Kora a b Religion in Caribbean Netherlands Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek Bonaire Religion Retrieved 24 March 2022 Ensenansa avansa Government of Bonaire Retrieved on February 27 2018 Scholengemeenschap Bonaire Kaya Frater Odulfinus z n About Us DutchCaribbeanLegalPortal com Retrieved 2014 05 20 Trends in the Caribbean Netherlands 2017 PDF www tourismbonaire com Retrieved 4 August 2021 a b c Households by the most spoken language in the household Population and Housing Census 2001 Central Bureau of Statistics Archived from the original on 2012 10 29 Davis Susan 2015 02 11 Scuba Instruction on Bonaire InfoBonaire Retrieved 2019 02 05 Bonaire Dive Courses Bonaire Official Tourism Site Retrieved 2019 02 05 A Well Deserved Closing Event for Two World Class Events 2013 01 13 Retrieved 2019 02 05 Bonaire Windsurfing Bonaire Official Tourism Site Retrieved 2019 02 05 Davis Susan 2015 09 10 Bonaire s Annual Sailing Regatta InfoBonaire Retrieved 2019 02 05 Front page for The Bonaire Reporter Bonaire Dutch Caribbean News in English 2002 05 31 Archived from the original on 2019 02 07 Retrieved 2019 02 05 Bonaire Sailing Regatta InfoBonaire 2018 10 10 Retrieved 2019 02 05 Sharara Re elected as ITTF President Press release International Table Tennis Federation May 15 2013 Archived from the original on February 15 2014 Retrieved December 7 2014 TWR Bonaire twrbonaire com 1952 02 11 Retrieved 2019 02 04 a b c Monde Radios du Bonaire TWR Radio Trans Mundial devient Shime 800 AM Michel FREMY et la radiodiffusion in French Retrieved 2019 02 04 PA3DMI 4 July 2012 Farewell to RNW shortwave broadcast from Bonaire Archived from the original on 2021 10 31 via YouTube a b Bonaire Newspapers amp News Media ABYZ News Links Retrieved 2019 02 05 Bonaire Times Bonaire Times 2019 02 24 Retrieved 2019 02 28 Co op History April 1997 Retrieved 2019 02 04 MiTV TELBO Archived from the original on 2019 02 24 Retrieved 2019 02 05 External links Edit Media related to Bonaire at Wikimedia Commons Bonaire travel guide from Wikivoyage Breathe Bonaire Live webcams from Bonaire including the first megapixel underwater webcam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bonaire amp oldid 1150835627, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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