Swine flu reshapes Mexican tourism
ACAPULCO, Mexico — Acapulco’s mayor is telling tourists from Mexico City to go home, and residents are stoning their cars. Cancun’s hotels are pleading for visitors to fill their empty rooms. The swine flu outbreak is remaking tourism in strange ways in a country heavily dependent on it.
Tourism to Mexico has plummeted since the swine flu outbreak was declared a week ago, causing the tourism secretary to say Friday that he’s shelving funds earmarked for a publicity campaign until after the epidemic subsides. Rodolfo Elizondo acknowledged it isn’t the best time to promote Mexico as a vacation spot.
Treasury Secretary Agustin Carstens said the flu will be a heavy blow to tourism, Mexico’s third-largest legal source of foreign currency.
Mexico’s resorts, however, are experiencing the crisis in very different ways.
The top destination, Cancun, caters largely to foreigners, who are steering clear of Mexico. The city has lost an estimated $2.4 million in the past week as occupancy dropped 40 percent below usual levels for this time of year, said Rodrigo de la Pena, president of the Cancun Hotel Association.
Businesses are doing everything they can to woo tourists, he said: Restaurants are offering two-for-one dinners and bars two-for-one drinks, while handicraft stores have $1 specials on dolls and necklaces.
“It’s imperative that our hotels have tourists,” Pena said. “We are in a serious economic crisis.”
The federal Tourism Department said about 70 percent of Cancun hotel reservations had been canceled in recent days and that occupancy for the coming week was projected at around 45 percent.
The Pacific coast resort of Huatulco saw occupancy rates drop by 46 percent, according to the department. Perhaps worst hit was Mexico City, where approximately 85 percent of hotel rooms are now empty.
Cruise ships lines have canceled about 64 port calls in Mexico that would have brought an estimated 134,000 tourists to Mexico.
Occupancy rates also dropped in Acapulco, but the city seems to want it that way for now.
Acapulco caters more to visitors from Mexico City, a five-hour drive away, but residents are afraid the tourists are bringing swine flu from the capital, where most cases have occurred.
“Someone who has flu symptoms shouldn’t think they can come to Acapulco for the weather and get better — that some fresh air and tequila and discos are going to make them forget about everything,” Mayor Manuel Anorve said. “So we ask them to be responsible and not come.”
Acapulco officials are putting out the word that bars, restaurants and tour boats are closed, and that the only things open for business are hotels.
Some residents were going further to drive home the message: Federal highway police said at least four vehicles with Mexico City license plates have been stoned as they entered Acapulco.
Those who do make it to Acapulco are getting a chilly reception — though there’s already a bias against residents of the capital, considered loud and pushy by many in Mexico’s interior.
Visitor Martha Rubio said employees at a beach restaurant laughed at her when she walked by on the beach in a bikini and a surgical mask.
“I don’t let it affect me,” she said, watching her children, 12 and 16, build sand castles.
Gas station attendant Miriam Arizmendi said many of her fellow workers were refusing to fill the tanks of Mexico City cars. She wasn’t joining them, but said she understood.
“They can infect us,” she said, wearing a mask and rubber gloves. “They shouldn’t come. The Mexico City government should declare a quarantine so they don’t leave.”
Mexico has said it will take an intense publicity campaign to win back tourists. Elizondo said he’ll send officials to China and Canada to learn how those countries revived their industries after being slammed by bird flu six years ago.
But for now, U.S., Canadian, Japanese and European tour operators are canceling trips, and cruise ships are changing routes to avoid Mexico. Continental Airlines Inc. said Friday it will halve flights to Mexico because planes are taking off empty.
That’s no wonder as T-shirts hit the market with a new spin on the tourist cliche: “I went to Mexico and all I got was swine flu.”
Associated Press writer Jorge Dominguez contributed to this report from Cancun.
Related News
Bodies of 5 men shot to death found in landfill near Mexico's Pacific resort of AcapulcoSeptember 12th, 2009 5 bodies found dumped in landfill near AcapulcoACAPULCO, Mexico — Police have found the bodies of five men dumped in a landfill near the Mexican resort city of Acapulco. The Guerrero state Public Safety Department says the men had been shot to death and police officers found a note with the bodies signed "The boss of bosses."
A statement issued Saturday by the department says investigators also found at least 50 bullet casings and duct tape at the scene.
Goa Govt. to invoke Epidemic Act after tourist season beginsAugust 5th, 2009 PANAJI - The Goa Government will invoke the Epidemic Act only after the tourist season commences at the end of September. "We do not intend to invoke the Epidemic Act at this point of time.
Stolen beach? Mexico shuts Cancun coastal strip, saying hotel's sand ill-gotten; tourists fumeJuly 31st, 2009 Mexico shuts Cancun beach, alleges sand was stolenMEXICO CITY — Surprised tourists found their little piece of Cancun beach paradise ringed by crime-scene tape and gun-toting sailors on Thursday. Environmental enforcement officers backed by Mexican navy personnel closed off hundreds of feet (dozens of meters) of powder-white coastline in front of a hotel accused of illegally accumulating sand on its beach.
Marin County to crack down on nude sunbathers after Muir Beach residents complainJune 19th, 2009 Marin County to crack down on nude sunbathersMUIR BEACH, Calif. — Officials are trying to curb lewd conduct at a longtime nude beach north of San Francisco after hearing complaints from a group of local residents.
Shootout kills 16 gunmen, 2 soldiers in Acapulco; tourists cower in hotelsJune 8th, 2009 Shootout kills 16 gunmen, 2 soldiers in AcapulcoACAPULCO, Mexico — It was a shootout straight from Hollywood in the former playground of its biggest stars: Outlaws holed up in a hillside mansion fought heavily armed Mexican soldiers with a rain of gunfire and grenades that had tourists cowering in hotels nearby. Roughly 3,000 shots and 50 explosions marked the four-hour battle late Saturday that left 16 gunmen and two soldiers dead.
Gunmen kill 2 Acapulco officers, wound 2 others; link to weekend gunbattle probedJune 8th, 2009 2 police officers killed in AcapulcoACAPULCO, Mexico — Attackers used grenades and guns in near-simultaneous attacks on two police stations in Acapulco Monday, killing two officers and wounding two others in the Pacific coast resort city plagued by drug violence. The bold pre-dawn attacks follow a spectacular four-hour gunbattle that killed 17 people — 13 suspected hit men, two innocent bystanders and two soldiers — said Daniel Velasco, an army commander in Acapulco.
Mexican military official: Shootout in Acapulco hotel zone kills 15 gunmen, 1 soldierJune 7th, 2009 Shootout kills 16 in Mexico's Acapulco resortACAPULCO, Mexico — Mexican soldiers fought a two-hour battle with heavily armed men holed up at a house in an Acapulco hotel zone, killing 15 of the gunmen as Mexican tourist cowered in their rooms nearby. One soldier was killed and the wounded included three soldiers and three bystanders.
Mexican military official: Shootout kills 15 gunmen, 1 soldier in AcapulcoJune 7th, 2009 Mexican colonel: Shootout kills 16 in AcapulcoACAPULCO, Mexico — It was a shootout straight from Hollywood in the former playground of its biggest stars: Masked and heavily armed Mexican soldiers battled outlaws holed up in a cliffside mansion in a four-hour shootout that had tourists cowering in hotels nearby. Roughly 3,000 shots flew, and 50 grenades exploded during the raucous gunbattle late Saturday that killed 15 gunmen and one soldier.
Mexico woos tourists after swine fluMay 14th, 2009 MEXICO CITY - In a bid to woo tourists into Mexico, hoteliers have come up with imaginative ideas, including an offer of free holidays for people contracting the disease while vacationing in the country. Several countries have cancelled their flights to Mexico after it confirmed the swine flu outbreak in the country April 23.
Tourists leave Mexican resort city amid swine flu fearsMay 4th, 2009 CANCUN - Hundreds of tourists have left the Mexican resort city of Cancun after the governmment announced a swine flu alert in the country. Hotels and resorts in the city have closed their operations following the alert.
Mexico raises confirmed swine flu death toll from 15 to 16, total confirmed cases to 397May 2nd, 2009 Mexico's swine flu death toll at 16MEXICO CITY — Mexico has raised its confirmed swine flu death toll from 15 to 16 and says the total number of confirmed cases of the virus had risen to 397. National Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova announced the new numbers late Friday.
Amid resignation and protests, Mexico begins forced 5-day break to contain virusMay 2nd, 2009 Mexico begins 5-day shutdown to curb virusMEXICO CITY — Mexico raised its confirmed swine flu death toll from 15 to 16 on Friday, adding that the total number of confirmed cases of the virus had risen to 397. National Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova announced the new numbers late Friday but insisted measures taken by the government to prevent large public gatherings are having an impact in controlling the outbreak.
Day after canceling youth team tournament, CONCACAF postpones beach championshipApril 28th, 2009 Swine flu postpones another CONCACAF tourneyNEW YORK — Another soccer tournament in Mexico has been disrupted by concerns over the swine flu. CONCACAF announced Tuesday it is postponing its beach soccer championship, scheduled to begin Wednesday in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
Strong quake sways tall buildings, adds to swine flu anxiety in already-tense Mexico CityApril 27th, 2009 Quake jars already-nervous Mexico City residentsMEXICO CITY — A strong earthquake struck central Mexico on Monday, swaying tall buildings in the capital and rattling nerves in a city already tense from a swine flu outbreak suspected of killing as many as 149 people nationwide
Near the epicenter in the Pacific coast state of Guerrero, two women aged 67 and 75 died of heart attacks during or shortly after the earthquake, and four homes and a perimeter wall collapsed in and around the resort of Acapulco, state police reported. "I'm scared," said Sarai Luna Pajas, a 22-year-old social services worker standing outside her Mexico City office building moments after it hit.
SC wildfire spreads near Myrtle Beach tourist spot; hundreds flee as dozens of homes burnApril 23rd, 2009 SC wildfire spreads near tourist beach; homes burnNORTH MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. — A coastal wildfire spread Thursday near one of the busiest tourist stretches in South Carolina, burning dozens of homes and forcing hundreds to flee in the middle of the night.