The Sunday Telegraph

Trump tells Guam: your tourism will rise Guam: your tourism will rise

- By Nicola Smith in Hagatna

Donald Trump yesterday assured the tiny Pacific island of Guam that America backed it “1,000 per cent” amid threats of a North Korean missile strike in a crisis he claimed would boost the territory’s tourism industry “tenfold”.

“We are with you 1,000 per cent. You are safe,” Mr Trump told Eddie Bazza Calvo, the Guam governor, who later posted footage of the call on speakerpho­ne to his Facebook page.

The governor praised the US president’s handling of the latest escalation of tensions with North Korea, in which Pyongyang threatened to attack Guam, a US territory, with four ballistic missiles.

“We’re going to do a great job, don’t worry about a thing,” Mr Trump responded. “They should have had me eight years ago.”

He added: “You’ve become extremely famous. All over the world they’re talking about Guam ... and your tourism. I can say this, your tourism, you’re going to see it go up tenfold ... so I congratula­te you. It looks beautiful.”

His words may offer some solace for the tropical paradise where 60 per cent of the economy relies on tourists from Japan, South Korea and mainland America, and another 30 per cent on two strategic US military bases. About 1.5 million tourists travel to Guam

‘You don’t see anyone panicking or otherwise they would evacuate the island’

every year, dwarfing the population of 162,000 US citizens.

Nathan Denight, chief executive of the Guam Visitors Bureau, said his organisati­on’s 450 members had discussed the potential impact of Pyongyang’s threat.

“There have been inquiries into the situation, but by communicat­ing that Guam is safe, people are still moving forward with their travels,” he said.

Some tour operators remain on edge. John Ko, who runs a room booking website, NET Enterprise­s, said there had been cancellati­ons but did not say what reasons were given.

Tourists strolling near the beachfront in Guam’s capital, Hagatna, confessed to feeling nervous.

“It’s a serious situation. Last night I kept thinking about Kim Jong-un’s missiles, and my mother asked me to come home a few days early,” said Kim Yeon-woo, a South Korean teacher on holiday with her husband, Dae-hyun. One drinks vendor ,who declined to give his name, said business was slower than usual. But Terry Debold, a spokesman, denied there was an issue, blaming media over-sensationa­lism”.

In the event of a missile strike, the sound of 15 sirens piercing the air would be the first warning for tourists and citizens that they had 14 minutes to get to safety. The alarm would be triggered by George Charfauros, Guam’s homeland security adviser, less than a minute after US surveillan­ce systems detected a launch.

“It’s real simple. You hear the alarm, get inside, seek shelter,” Mr Charfauros told The Sunday Telegraph. While the island has no bunkers, a strong concrete building would serve as an adequate shelter, he added. “Almost 95 per cent of our buildings are concrete.” Mr Charfauros’s confidence rests on his belief that any missile would have a 0.00001 per cent chance of penetratin­g the multiple layers of US missile defence technology based on Guam.

He believes Kim Jong-un’s plan to fire a quartet of Hwasong-12 ballistic missiles within 19 to 25 miles of the island by mid-August is a sign that the dictator is bluffing. “It’s part bluster and probably part of a ploy to force the US to play its hand,” he said.

Despite his bravado, the Homeland Security Office on Friday issued a two-page fact sheet on how to survive a nuclear attack and officials urged families to prepare supplies and personal emergency plans.

The advice was met with mixed reactions by locals browsing the shops of Hagatna’s Micronesia shopping mall.

“Guam is very small. It doesn’t really matter if you look at the flash or not, you’re gone. There’s nothing we can do,” said Jake Reyes, 28, a security guard. In the nearby K-Mart store, Elena Sanicolas, a customer entering the store with her young grandson, said they were going to buy supplies for a pool party. “You don’t see anyone panicking or otherwise they would evacuate the island,” she said.

“The newspaper says it only takes 14 minutes for their bomb to get here but … the Lord’s going to take care of us.”

Boris Johnson said yesterday that Kim Jong-un’s regime was responsibl­e for the crisis. On Twitter, the Foreign Secretary said Britain was working with the US to find a diplomatic solution. “The North Korean regime is the cause of this problem and they must fix it,” he said. It came as China’s leader, Xi Jinping, urged Mr Trump to avoid rhetoric that could inflame tensions with North Korea.

 ??  ?? A hotel receptioni­st with the local newspaper in Tamuning, Guam
A hotel receptioni­st with the local newspaper in Tamuning, Guam
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom