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Comforting the Caribbean

Nikki Ekstein
Nikki Ekstein • 9 min read

It is business as usual throughout most of the region, and tourism on islands that are back in action will speed recovery everywhere else
Just as cruise ships provided much-needed relief for evacuees of Caribbean islands during the one-two punches of Hurricanes Irma and Maria, other elements of the local tourism industry are already hard at work helping to get the region back on track.

While governments struggle to get help to devastated residents in Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, St Barts, Barbuda, Dominica and other hard-hit communities, one thing that outsiders can do to help is to visit other islands that made it through relatively unscathed. A majority of the Caribbean islands, where tourism accounts for up to 90% of overall GDP, still need visitors this winter — both for themselves and to support their suffering neighbours.

“We need people to be part of this economy,” explains Nikheel Advani, chief operating officer and principal of Grace Bay Resorts in Turks and Caicos, a chain of 40 islands that depends on tourism for 85% of its direct and indirect GDP. His resorts recently welcomed their first guests after the hurricanes, with little visible damage beyond a few stripped palm trees. “In the news, everyone is saying that the Caribbean is closed. Taking away the fear right now is key.”

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