Want to Help Oaxaca Quake Victims? Don’t Cancel Your Travel Plans Susannah Rigg - Conde Nast Traveler | |
go to original September 18, 2017 |
Hotel los Amantes Oaxaca City, Mexico (Booking.com)Booking.com
Mexico's fifth-largest state was hard hit by the recent earthquake, but the capital city is open for business - and needs it badly.
On September 7, an 8.1-magnitude earthquake rattled Mexico, shaking people out of their beds from the epicenter in the southern state of Chiapas to Mexico City some 600 miles away. It was the strongest earthquake to hit the country in over a century and has led to 100 deaths to date. Worst hit were the Istmo region of Oaxaca and the mountainous Mixe region in the same state, and efforts are under way - by the government, international nonprofits, and local communities alike - to provide relief to those most affected by the quake.
While this earthquake was a tragedy for Mexico and was followed by three days of national mourning, word is also coming from Oaxaca City that tourists are canceling their trips to the state capital out of fear of aftershocks.
“I believe people think the city was destroyed,” says Rosario Hernández, owner of the tour company Oaxacago, who had a group of seven cancel a three-day trip later this month because of safety concerns. In fact, despite the earthquake being felt in Oaxaca City, there was little structural damage and no deaths or serious injuries reported there.
Hotelier Jaime Amaro reported a drop in room occupancy from 70 percent to less than 10 percent immediately after the earthquake and even had two days with an empty hotel. Speaking to other partner businesses - tour operators, restaurant owners, hoteliers - he found all of them reported “a noticeable standstill in business.”
Chef and restaurant owner Pilar Cabrera is also concerned about the long-term effect of the news on the tourist industry in Oaxaca City. “Tourists who had planned to come for Day of the Dead, [one of Oaxaca’s busiest times of the year], are scared to come. They don’t realize that the Istmo is four hours from here.”
Oaxaca is Mexico's fifth-largest state and the capital city sits in a valley surrounded by mountains on all sides. Juchitán and other towns in the Istmo hard hit by the quake are a four- to five-hour drive away, as is the Sierra Mixe, much of which sits above the clouds. Unfortunately, however, since the capital city has the same name as the state, “the news says Oaxaca and tourists think that the houses in Oaxaca City have collapsed,” Cabrera says with concern.
In a show of solidarity not uncommon for the state, communities across Oaxaca are collecting and delivering supplies to those affected, but concern in the state capital about the potential effect on tourism is very real. Oaxaca has little private industry and relies heavily on the tourist trade. Some 400,000 people across the state make their living from tourism or hospitality - an industry that correlates to 8.2 percent of the national GDP - and people choosing to stay away creates a precarious situation beyond the earthquake.
Read the rest at Condé Nast Traveler
Related: Mexico Earthquake Relief Efforts and Links to Donate (The Mexico Report)
Related: Mexico Takes Stock of the Millions Needed to Rebuild After Quake (Vatican Radio)
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