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YES DIS A WADDIE US PRESS DID WANT

take a beating .BY JIM WYSS
[email protected]
IDYLLIC SCENE: Swiss tourists Danny Dale and his son enjoy the beach on Jamaica’s north shore.
KINGSTON, Jamaica — As the manhunt for alleged drug kingpin Christopher “Dudus” Coke drags into a third week and the government takes its anti-gang crusade nationwide, this nation of 2.6 million is fretting about the strength of its economic backbone: the event and tourism industries.
As scenes of firefights between government forces and gunmen loyal to Coke spooked tourists, airlines canceled flights, event planners pulled the plug and the government suspended its promotional ads.
The only comparable event is a hurricane, said Wayne Cummings, the president of the Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Association.
But while bad weather blows over, this crisis has raised questions about crime and political stability that may hang over the nation for months, he said.
“This has the potential to hurt us far more than any natural disaster,” he said.
While it’s impossible to tally the financial damage the pursuit for the drug don has had, the Jamaican Chamber of Commerce estimated the economic loss at $100 million.
Informal polls by the hotel association suggest some 300 to 350 people canceled their reservations in the days immediately after the fiercest fighting that broke out May 23.
But the country will never know how many people changed their minds entirely about the country, Cummings said.
Tourism is Jamaica’s top earner of foreign currency, employs 80,000 people and accounts for about 20 percent of the gross domestic product. While the global recession has sapped most industries, tourism grew 9 percent during the first quarter.
“The current economic stability of the country is predicated on the tourism sector,” Jamaica’s Minister of Tourism Edmund Bartlett told The Miami Herald.
The island sees some 1.7 million visitors annually and about 60 to 70 percent of them come from the United States, attracted by its white sandy beaches and relaxed island vibe.
But that vibe was shattered last month when the government — under pressure at home and from abroad — tried to capture Coke for extradition to the United States on drug and weapons charges. The ensuing four-day firefight claimed the lives of 73 civilians and three security officers. It also revealed a side of Jamaica not touted in glossy brochures and reggae-heavy television spots.
According to the United Nations, Jamaica has the highest murder rate in the western hemisphere except for Honduras. In 2008, the country had 59.5 murders per 100,000 people. The United States, by comparison, has a rate of 5.2 per 100,000.
The government has pulled international tourism ads and doesn’t know when they will resume.
“It was pointless to keep trying to compete with news of this kind,” Cummings said. “It was throwing good money after bad.”
While the initial fighting took place in West Kingston, more than 100 miles away from tourist hotspots along the north coast, Prime Minister Bruce Golding has vowed to take the fight nationwide.
“It is a campaign that will be sustained and intensified,” Golding told parliament last month. “It is a campaign that will target criminal gangs wherever they exist, irrespective of their political alliances or whether have any such alliances.”
That could put other gang-ridden areas under the microscope, including the northern parish of St. James, home to the resort city of Montego Bay.
So far the northern provinces have largely brushed off the Kingston crisis.
Cruise lines said they had not been affected by the troubles, and Sandals, which operates seven resorts in four areas of Jamaica — Montego Bay, Ocho Rios, Negril and Westmoreland — said it had not seen a dip in business.
Elizabeth Bennet of New York was visiting Montego Bay with her husband last week, despite U.S. State Department warnings for travelers to avoid Kingston and surrounding areas.
“It’s my first time to Jamaica, it’s a beautiful country,” she said. “But they have to control that stuff in Kingston.”
While the secluded communities up north may be able to ride out the storm, it could particularly punish Kingston, which is more reliant on events and conferences.
Dozens of concerts and festivals were canceled over Memorial Day weekend. Former Prime Minister Edward Seaga canceled his 80th birthday party until the situation improves. And, most importantly, the popular international cricket matches scheduled for June 3 and 10 in Kingston were moved to Trinidad.
Each match likely represented some $350,000 per day in rooms alone, Cummings said.
“This would have been a phenomenal event for Kingston,” he said.
As the tourism industry has stumbled and events postponed, ad revenues have dropped, said Gary Allen, managing director of the RJR Communications Group, which owns television and radio stations across the country.
“I really don’t want to see what my May numbers are going to look like,” he said.
The economic outlook was sunny for Jamaica. It has just reorganized its foreign debt and tourism and agriculture exports were helping it recover from the global economic turmoil.
“This last couple of weeks has the potential to really threaten that macroeconomic stability,” said Joseph Matalon, the president of the Private Sector Organization of Jamaica, who feared it might dampen local and foreign investment in the country.
Miami Herald staff writer Martha Brannigan contributed to this report from Miami, and special correspondent

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/12/v-fullstory/1676252/amid-jamaica-extradition-crisis.html#ixzz0qds9YA52

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