Trump, Hurricane Irma blamed for drop in Cuban tourism

A couple of tourists travel in a horse carriage in front of the Capitolio in Havana, Cuba. Picture: Ramon Espinosa/AP

A couple of tourists travel in a horse carriage in front of the Capitolio in Havana, Cuba. Picture: Ramon Espinosa/AP

Published Jan 30, 2018

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Havana - Tourism to Cuba, one of the few

bright spots in its ailing economy, has slid in the wake of

Hurricane Irma and the Trump administration's tighter

restrictions on travel to the Caribbean island, a Cuban tourism

official said on Monday.

Although the number of visitors rose nearly 20 percent in

2017, it fell 10 percent on the year in December, and is down

7-8 percent this month, Jose Manuel Bisbe York, the president of

Cuban state travel agency conglomerate Viajes Cuba, said.

Arrivals from the United States, which had surged in the

wake of the U.S.-Cuban detente in 2014, took the worst hit,

dropping 30 percent last December, he told Reuters.

"Since Hurricane Irma, we've seen arrivals shrink," Bisbe

York said on the sidelines of the event organized by U.S. travel

agency insightCuba to dispel tourist misperceptions about Cuba.

Irma hit in September, just as the tourism sector was taking

reservations for its high season from November to March.

Images of destruction put many would-be visitors off

although Cuba had fixed its tourism installations within two

months, said Bisbe York. Arrivals of Canadians, the largest

group of tourists to Cuba, were down 4-5 percent.

"But we see this as a temporary thing and what we are seeing

is that arrivals are recovering from month to month," said Bisbe

York, adding that Cuba would go ahead with its plans to launch

more than 15 hotels island-wide this year.

"The first trimester will be the most difficult, because

logically the change in the public perception takes time."

Occupancy rates at the hotels in Cuba managed by Spain's

Meliá Hotels International S.A. were down around 20

percent on the year in December and January, said Francisco

Camps, Melia's Cuba deputy general manager.

"From February though, we are already reaching figures

similar to those we had in previous years," he said.

Republican President Donald Trump's more hostile stance

towards Cuba than his Democratic predecessor Barack Obama looks

set to have a more lasting impact than Irma.

The number of US visitors had surged since the Obama

administration created greater exemptions to a ban on tourism to

the Caribbean's largest island and restored regular commercial

flights and cruises.

Arrivals reached a record 619 523 last year, up from 91 254

in 2014.

But the Trump administration in September issued a warning

on travel there due to a spate of alleged health attacks on U.S.

diplomats in Havana. In November, tighter travel regulations

also went into effect.

The double whammy seriously depressed US visits, American

tour operators and a cruise line said at Monday's event,

although in reality the restrictions remain looser than before

the detente and travel easier.

Cuba is also still one of the safest destinations worldwide,

they said.

"While the regulations he changed very little the perception

in the U.S. was that you no longer could travel to Cuba

legally," said insightCuba's Tom Popper, noting his agency's

reservations were down 50 percent this year.

"Part of hosting this event was to communicate that it is

100 percent legal to travel to Cuba." 

Reuters

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