Global Times - Weekend

‘Category Hell'

Bahamas tourist industry hopes for quick comeback from storm

- Reuters

As rescuers search for bodies amid mountains of debris and the stench of death on the Bahamas island of Abaco, life on most of the archipelag­o’s 700 isles is little changed.

Cruise ships have pulled in and out of the capital and tourist hub Nassau in the two weeks since Hurricane Dorian struck the northweste­rn islands, depositing foreign sightseers on shore who haggle for conch shells and T-shirts.

Waiters at the bayside Senor Frogs restaurant pour electric blue liquor shots straight into revelers’ mouths, while at the Fat Tuesday frozen daiquiri bar nearby the sunburned masses cool off with spiked pineapple-mango smoothies.

Workers in the country’s vital tourist trade are hoping for a quick comeback, even as the Bahamas struggles with its first steps toward recovery from a storm that killed at least 50 people and left around 70,000 more needing shelter, food and water and medical aid.

The sector faces many challenges: Two popular tourist destinatio­ns – Abaco and the island of Grand Bahama – were essentiall­y swept off the tourist maps by Dorian.

“Those were our second and third most important destinatio­ns,” said Ellison “Tommy” Thompson, deputy director general of the ministry of tourism and aviation.

Thompson said no one was talking about “throwing up our hands and giving up” on the hardhit islands. But the images of the devastatio­n have affected everyone from tour operators on the islands to US-based travel agents who help connect travelers with cruise ships and activities.

Highlighti­ng the destructio­n, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he was “horrified” on Saturday after taking an aerial tour of Abaco.

“I’ve never seen such a level of systematic devastatio­n,” Guterres told reporters.

“Hurricane Dorian has been

classified as Category 5, I think it is Category Hell, but it was not powered by the devil".

Tourism in 2018 accounted for $5.7 billion, about half the country’s gross domestic product, according to Thompson.

Away from Nassau’s tourist strip, luxury hotels were also bustling. At Baha Mar, an opulent hotel and entertainm­ent complex, the casino floor was littered with vacationer­s.

Just over 145 kilometers to the north, the hunt for bodies continued

amid the wreckage of Abaco, where the United Nations’ World Food Programme says about 90 percent of structures were destroyed.

“This has devastated our spirits and we are mourning with our friends who lost loved ones, but the reality is that life has to go on,” said constructi­on company owner Jackson Brennen, 57, who was celebratin­g his wife’s birthday at Nassau’s Baha Mar.

“Only two of the islands were devastated, we’re still open for business, but it’s very difficult because the pain hasn’t stopped.”

Dave Curry, 37, who followed his father into the tour business, has run Simply Dave Nassau Tours for the last 20 years. His day trips pull people away from the high prices and tourist traps of downtown Nassau to visit historical sites and a local flea market in residentia­l areas.

Curry said his bookings had dropped by about a quarter due to cancellati­ons.

The slowdown has delivered a kind of one-two punch, as the Bahamas moves into a seasonal lull following the US Labor Day holiday weekend.

Curry likened recent events to the period after the September 11, 2001 attacks in the US, when many people in the Bahamas had friends and family who were impacted.

“It was a time of remorse, it was a time of stillness and consciousn­ess and that’s what you feel right now on the islands,” Curry said.

US visitors are among those who have thought twice about Bahamas trips after viewing images of Dorian’s devastatio­n.

“We’ve seen 450 to 550 changes and cancellati­ons,” said Gus Machado, sales director at Brickell Travel in Miami.

While some cancelled trips out of fear of getting caught in storm force winds, Machado said others were simply frightened out of travel by the idea of seeing devastated islands.

That mindset is something Thompson and others in the tourism ministry hope to fight by emphasizin­g that islands such as Eleuthera boast tranquil pink sand beaches ripe for visitors.

“The business of tourism has to go on in order for us to get the revenue to rebuild,” Thompson explained.

 ??  ?? Destructio­n caused by Hurricane Dorian on Abaco Island, Bahamas on September 7
Destructio­n caused by Hurricane Dorian on Abaco Island, Bahamas on September 7
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