Regional countries will not rush to re-open borders to accommodate tourists – Barbados PM

Caribbean Community (CARICOM) countries will adopt measures that will ensure the safety of their citizens as well as tourists as they prepare to re-open their borders post coronavirus(COVID-19) pandemic, Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley said Tuesday.

Mottley, who is also the chair of the 15-member regional integration grouping, told the BBC World Service that regional countries, whose economies are highly dependent on the tourism industry, have been severely affected by the virus that was first detected in China last December and blamed for more than 340,000 deaths and 5.5 million infection of others worldwide.

“We are not going to be driven by a date, we are going to be driven by protocols that make us safe because we want to remain safe for our people; we want to remain safe for people who are visiting us and this is not only Barbados’ position but a number of countries within the Caribbean Community,” she said.

“We are not going to be driven by a date, we are going to be driven by protocols that make us safe because we want to remain safe for our people; we want to remain safe for people who are visiting us and this is not only Barbados’ position but a number of countries within the Caribbean Community,’ she said.

Mottley said she is hoping that the tourism sector would become functional within weeks rather than months “but we need to make sure that we touch all the bases.”

“The big issue is testing and testing before people get on the plane and testing when people arrive. Quite frankly, we need access to rapid test or test protocols that will allow us to determine what is the risk that we are going to take if a person is tested 24 hours before or should the person be tested within a matter of hours before going to check in”.

Mottley said that the region is working through all of the protocols to ensure the safety of both nationals and tourists alike with the relevant stakeholders including the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association that had written to her on the matter.

“It is not our intention to import, it is not our intention to have any infected but at the same time we have to balance the reality that the Caribbean is among the most traveled, if not the most travel and trade dependent region in the world with 0 50 per cent of our GDP effectively coming from it.”:

Mottley said that the pandemic has significantly affected the revenues of governments in the region, noting “across the entire region you see April will probably be a month where anywhere between 40 to 60 per cent of government revenues have been affected in tourism dependent countries.

“We have also recognised that the unemployment rates in most cases in countries that are tourism dependent have gone from double to treble in some instances. It is no different from what’s happening in the UK and the US,’ she said, adding “the difference is however, we have a much narrower base and there are a number of countries that effectively depend on tourism.”

But she noted that there may have been a silver lining for Caribbean hoteliers, who normally would have used the down period of “our winter season” to undertake rehabilitation work, training and other activities related to their plants.

“But the scale of unemployment has been crippling,” she added.

(CMC)

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