Tourism to Cuba falls after travel ban tightens

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Tourism to Cuba falls after travel ban tightens

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Tourists ride in a vintage car in Havana, Cuba on Aug. 21. [REUTERS/YONHAP]

Tourist arrivals to Cuba plunged 23.6 percent this year in July, official data showed on Wednesday, confirming the blow dealt to its sector by the Trump administration’s tightening of U.S. restrictions on travel to the Caribbean island.

Data from the statistics office had shown a 20 percent drop in arrivals in June, after Washington that month banned cruises to Cuba and made it harder for U.S. citizens to get an exemption from the ban on travel there.

The sustained decline reverses a boom in arrivals and, therefore, affects the broader tourism industry in recent years following the U.S.-Cuban detente under former U.S. President Barack Obama that U.S. President Donald Trump is now unraveling.

The Trump administration has targeted two of the few bright spots in Cuba’s otherwise beleaguered economy, tourism and foreign investment, as part of its campaign to pressure the Communist government to reform and drop support for embattled leftist Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. Analysts say Trump appears to also be eyeing the 2020 presidential elections, with the swing state of Florida home to many Cuban-Americans who welcome the harder line on Havana and his base applauding it as part of his broader attack on socialism.

The administration’s measures are hurting an economy already battling a cash crunch in the wake of a steep decline in aid from leftist ally Venezuela and a drop in exports.

The Cuban government last month revised sharply downwards its estimate for full-year visitor arrivals to 4.3 million from an original goal of more than five million. That will spell a 8.5 percent drop from the 4.7 million reported last year.

While the decline is impacting the state tourism sector, it is also hurting the many restaurants, bed-and-breakfasts and taxi drivers in the fledgling Cuban private sector that the United States says it wants to support.

Reuters
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