Iran Daily

Chile to restrict tourists and non-locals on Easter Island

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Easter Island is known for its unique Moai monumental statues carved by the Rapa Nui people, believed to have arrived on the remote landmass in the southeaste­rn Pacific Ocean in around the 12th century.

Despite its isolated location some 3,500 kilometers (2,000 miles) from the coast of Chile, the island is a popular tourist destinatio­n, not least due to its remarkable collection of around 900 tall human figures with distinctiv­e features and standing up to 10 meters (32 feet) tall, AFP reported.

However, it is those very tourists, alongside mainland migrants, who have become a threat to the island’s wellbeing. Chile, which annexed the territory in 1888, has decided to act.

In 2007, Easter Island was designated a special territory while back in March, congress voted to limit the number of tourists and foreign or mainland residents allowed on the island, and the time they are allowed to stay.

As of Wednesday, new rules will come into effect that reduce the time tourists — Chileans not part of the Rapa Nui people and foreigners — can stay on the island from 90 to 30 days.

“Foreigners are already taking over the island,” Mayor Pedro Edmunds told AFP.

At the last census in 2017, there were 7,750 people living on Easter Island, almost double the population of a few decades ago, before the island was hit by a tourism boom and the real estate developmen­t that accompanie­d it. Edmunds said that number is 3,000 ‘too many’. “They’re damaging the local idiosyncra­sy, the thousand-year culture is changing and not for the good,” he added, saying that “customs from the continent” were infiltrati­ng the island and “that’s not positive.” Crime and domestic violence figures are also rising. It’s not just obnoxious people from the mainland causing problems, though — the increase in tourism is harming the environmen­t.

All basic services are straining under the pressure, not least waste management, Ana Maria Gutierrez, the local government’s environmen­tal adviser told AFP.

A decade ago the island generated 1.4 metric tons (1.5 US tons) of waste per year per inhabitant, but that figure has almost doubled to 2.5 tons today, with a population that recycles very little. “Environmen­tally, the island is very fragile,” said Gutierrez. The new laws, however, impose stricter rules on those who wish to live on the island, amongst them a requiremen­t to be related to someone from the Rapa Nui people: Either a parent, partner or child.

Others who will be allowed to stay are public servants, employees of organizati­ons that provide services to the government, and those who develop an independen­t economic activity alongside their families.

On arrival, tourists must present their hotel reservatio­n or an invitation from a resident. The rules will also establish a yet-to-be-decided maximum capacity. But Edmunds is not happy, as he feels the rules do not go far enough to protect the island’s culture, heritage and singularit­y.

“I don’t agree with these rules, it’s not enough because it doesn’t reflect all the aspiration­s of the island,” he said, admitting that like ‘many other Rapa Nui’ he favors a ‘total’ ban on the arrival of new residents. However, he said the legislatio­n was at least ‘a good start’. Rapa Nui are a Polynesian people closely related to those on Tahiti, whereas the majority of Chileans have European ancestry, with a minority of indigenous peoples.

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