The Borneo Post (Sabah)

From Cancun to Los Cabos, tourists scared off Mexico’s beaches

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IN THE spring break capital of Cancun, Mexico, hotel occupancy has tumbled 10 per cent this year. As bad as that is, over in Los Cabos, on the tip of the Baja California peninsula, it’s worse.

The airport serving Cabo San Lucas and its lesser-known sister city, San Jose del Cabo, is looking emptier these days. And hotel guests have canceled 35,000 nights of bookings over the next year - collective­ly a decade’s worth of visits for a single traveller.

At a time when the weaker peso should be luring American travellers in droves, many are staying away, spooked by a wave of violence that’s come dangerousl­y close to tourist hot spots. Gunmen opened fire at a Cancun nightclub in November, and a cooler with two human heads was found on Cabo San Lucas’s main hotel strip in June. But the biggest blow came on Aug 22, when the US State Department issued a travel warning advising tourists to steer clear altogether.

“Group tourism automatica­lly went down the moment the warning hit,” said Carlos Gosselin, head of the hotel associatio­n for Cancun and Puerto Morelos. Many insurance companies likely won’t even consider offering coverage in areas under advisory, hurting convention­s and events in the area, he said.

Mexico is re-inforcing security in popular tourist spots to get the State Department to revise its views, and companies including Hilton Worldwide and Marriott Internatio­nal are spending millions to make guests feel safer. Their motivation is clear: Barclays estimates that a drop in tourism could wipe out as much as 0.5 percentage point from Mexico’s gross domestic product growth this year.

“Lower tourism activity will definitely have an impact on growth,” said Marco Oviedo, head of Latin America economic research at Barclays. “External tourism is one of the most important sources of income in the current account.”

Mexico gets about US$20 billion (RM90 billion) a year from tourism. With murders quadruplin­g in Los Cabos and doubling in Cancun this year, a chunk of that revenue may be at stake. Quintana Roo, the state where Cancun is located, is the destinatio­n of a third of all the nation’s internatio­nal tourists.

In Los Cabos, local and federal authoritie­s are teaming up with hotels, time-share companies and the airport operator to step up the area’s security.

The group is spending US$50 million to increase surveillan­ce cameras to cover the 20-mile main stretch that includes hotels, restaurant­s and public beaches. A new military facility, paid for in part by the private sector, will be built near a highway to respond to any activity spotted on the cameras.

It is set to open in the second quarter of 2018.

“We understand and appreciate that travellers are more concerned than ever about their safety and security and we have rigorous security procedures in place at all of our hotels in Mexico,” Marriott said in an emailed response to questions. “Mexico continues to be a desirable destinatio­n for visitors from around the world and we’ve had very few cancellati­ons for Holiday season due to this matter.”

But the slowdown in Los Cabos since the travel warning is starting to show in other areas.

Internatio­nal passenger arrivals dropped two per cent in September, the first decline in three years, and compares with a 20 per cent average gain for most of this year, according to airport operator Grupo Aeroportua­rio del Pacifico SAB and the Los Cabos Tourism Board.

Other factors such as hurricanes and earthquake­s in recent months contribute­d, said Rodrigo Esponda, managing director of the tourism board.

American Airlines Vacations, which packages trips to beach destinatio­ns in Mexico, said business had been rising about 25 per cent from a year earlier - until the travel warning torpedoed demand. Meanwhile, the online-booking site Best Day Travel Group has also seen a slowdown in reservatio­ns for the end of the year, said Director Julian Balbuena.

Los Cabos is the hardest-hit destinatio­n with a six per cent drop, he said.

“We were having a good year for Mexico in particular,” said Eduardo Marcos, president of American Airlines Vacations.

Gosselin, from the hotel associatio­n, said the travel warning went too far and may have been influenced by a shift in US policies toward Mexico following the election of President Donald Trump.

There are also signs the alert’s effect on tourism is waning, he said, as the peso is still trading about 26 per cent below its 10year average. Marcos also said he thinks bookings will pick back up. Even so, the hotel associatio­n is putting up 10 million pesos (RM2.3 million) for a marketing campaign aimed at attracting more American tourists to Cancun hotels, Gosselin said. The move came after hotel occupancy growth fell from a clip of about two per cent last year to a drop of about 10 per cent, he said.

“Ninety per cent of the economic activity here is tied to tourism,” Esponda said in a phone interview from Los Cabos.

“That’s why security has to improve. We need tourism to continue improving people’s quality of life - and it’s a shared responsibi­lity.” — WPBloomber­g

Mexico is re-inforcing security in popular tourist spots to get the State Department to revise its views, and companies including Hilton Worldwide and Marriott Internatio­nal are spending millions to make guests feel safer.

 ??  ?? A federal Police officer patrols a beach in Cancun on July 11. — WP-Bloomberg photos
A federal Police officer patrols a beach in Cancun on July 11. — WP-Bloomberg photos
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