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Haiti: Martelly administration working to position country as the next hot tourism destination in the Caribbean

Friday, July 12, 2013

As Haiti rises from the ashes and shakes off its difficult past, the Martelly administration is working to position the country as the next hot destination in the Caribbean.

This is by no means a herculean and ambitious task – health scares, crime, hurricanes and the monster earthquake of January 2010 have badly damaged the tourism that was once a mainstay of the Haitian economy.

The Martelly administration, is pinning its hopes on a surge of private investment in hotels and resorts, plus a privately financed US$13.2 million airport and new infrastructure on the southern island of Ile-a-Vache, and an US$8 million development of the historic coastal town of Jacmel.

Haiti’s tourism Ministry’s budget has more than doubled. Under the previous government it was US$2 million. Now it’s US$4.7 million, and private investors are paying US$27 million to finance development on projects that include Ile-a-Vache and in Jacmel.

The ministry says it has signed off on 15 year tax breaks and exemptions from import duties for 11 hotel and resort projects costing a total of US$160 million, with nearly US$100 million more in the pipeline or completed. It’s also training a force of 53 “tourism police officers” who will learn Spanish and English and be trained in first aid and customer service.

While many in Haiti welcome anything that can create jobs, some worry that the country isn’t ready for a tourist invasion. For one thing, the Tourism Ministry says it has only 3,200 hotel rooms. The government hopes to double the number of hotel rooms in two years. The country still needs to re-vamp its medical services which are presently under considerable strain and to improve its infrastructure if it is even going to compete with its Caribbean neighbors which boast of superior infrastructure, stability and advanced tourism industries.

This was echoed by a Haitian senator Francois Anick Joseph, who said the country needs paved roads, drinking water and reliable electricity. “There are a lot of things that need to be done before we can attract tourists,” he said in a telephone interview.

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