The island area of Sint Maarten (Dutch: Eilandgebied Sint Maarten) is one of five island areas (Eilandgebieden) of the Netherlands Antilles, encompassing the southern half of the island of Saint Martin/Sint Maarten. At the 2001 Netherlands Antilles census, the population of the Eilandgebied was 30,594, for a population density of 900 inhabitants per km².
Little Bay (Fort Amsterdam) with 2,176 inhabitants
Simpson Bay with 736 inhabitants
Lowlands with 232 inhabitants
Simpsonbay, Madame Estate, Dutch Cul-de-sac, Duch Quarter, Cole Bay, Oyster pond, South Reward, Saint-Peters, Pointe-Blanche, Middle Region, Cay hill, Upper Prince's Quarter and Lower Prince's Quarter.
Politics and Government
Sint Maarten is an "island area" (eilandgebied in Dutch), a component of the Netherlands Antilles comparable to a municipality. The Netherlands Antilles are part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands though not in the European Union. Its currency is the Antillean guilder (however, the United States dollar is widely accepted). A planned restructuring of the Netherlands Antilles on December 15, 2008 will see Sint Maarten become a separate country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands (like Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles are now). This dissolution is still planned, but has been postponed to an indefinite future date.[1]
The island area of Sint Maarten is ruled by an island council, an executive council, and an administrator (gezaghebber in Dutch) appointed by the Dutch Crown.
discuss – Summary of the Sint Maarten Island Council election results, 2007
Parties
Party leader
Votes
%
Seats
Democratische Partij (DP)
Sarah Wescott-Williams
6,639
49.38
6
National Alliance (NA)
William Marlin
5,583
41.53
5
People's Progressive Alliance (PPA)
Gracita Arrindell
1,107
8.23
—
Democratic Labour Party (DLP)
Johan van Heyningen
69
0.51
—
National Democratic Party (NDP)
Theophilus Priest
26
0.19
—
St. Maarten People's Believers Independent Movement (SPBIM)