Barbados elects first ever president ahead of becoming republic
Barbados has elected its first ever president as it prepares
to become a republic, removing Queen Elizabeth as head of state.
Dame Sandra Mason, 72, is set to be sworn in on 30 November,
which will mark the country's 55th anniversary of independence from Britain.
The first woman to serve on the Barbados Court of Appeals,
Dame Sandra has been governor-general since 2018.
The government announced the plan to move to a republic
status last year.
It said "the time [had] come" for Barbados to
"fully leave our colonial past behind". The change had already been
recommended by a constitutional review in 1998.
The historic election came after a joint session of the
House of Assembly and the Senate on Wednesday. Prime Minister Mia Mottley
described the vote as a "seminal moment" for the nation.
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