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Dominican Republic and Russian Tourists

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  • Dominican Republic and Russian Tourists

    David Jessop, Contributor

    A few weeks ago, I was in the Dominican Republic. I had been at business meetings and was travelling on to London. As there is no direct air service to the United Kingdom (UK), and I wanted to avoid the time-consuming and frustrating experience of transiting Miami, I decided to travel via Punta Cana, on a British Airways service which, although routed via Antigua, significantly reduced my journey time.
    For those who have not visited Punta Cana or its neighbour, Bavaro, they are, for the most part, two mass market destinations receiving around 2.5 million visitors a year, mainly at all-inclusive properties located on wide and long white-sand beaches.
    At the airport, what was particularly interesting was the very large numbers of Russian visitors waiting to depart for Moscow, something I have not observed at any other Caribbean airport.
    What rapidly became apparent on exploring further was that Russia was fast becoming one of the major sources of visitors for that country.
    According to Dominican statistics, 158,415 Russian visitors arrived in 2012, making it now the country's fourth-leading source market for tourism after the United States, Canada and France.
    The rate of growth is phenomenal: up by 35 per cent last year and expected to rise by around 51 per cent this year, according to the Dominican tourism industry. At present, there are 12 Russian flights a week arriving into Punta Cana: Transaero from Moscow and St Petersburg (eight a week); Aeroflot from St Petersburg (two a week); and Orenair from Moscow (two a week); with charters also coming from St Petersburg, Moscow and Ekaterinburg.
    What was particularly interesting, based on personal observations and from reviewing the statistics, is that Russian visitors fit the profile of those most sought after by the Caribbean.
    They are mostly aged between 25 and 45, come from an educated, upper upper-middle class demographic, and have high purchasing power, as evidenced from the designer label shop bags they were carrying, interestingly indicating in Russian, in many cases, the names of local Dominican stores and supermarkets.
    What is particularly startling is how suddenly this has happened. Until two years ago, Cuba was the only Caribbean destination for Russian visitors (76,500 arrivals in 2012) but now, so rapidly have Russian arrival numbers in the Dominican Republic increased, that Russia has already overtaken Germany as a source market and may soon do the same in relation to those from France.
    According to Radhames Martinez Aponte, a vice-minister at the Ministry of Tourism, this is a direct result of a huge investment in tourism promotion in Russia as a part of a drive to develop new source markets.
    In the Anglophone Caribbean, Jamaica, so far, is the only nation actively courting Russian tourists with a twice weekly service on Transaero into Montego Bay. However, if airlift can be secured, Russia would appear to be a market set to grow dramatically for the region as a whole; especially when present travellers from its major cities begin to move away from the mass market experience, start to seek different types of properties and locations in other Caribbean destinations, and can be offered, probably in their own language, shopping and an up-scale experience.
    • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

  • #2
    Interesting Development

    This is an interesting article. Like no doubt most posters here, I always knew that the Dominican Republic was one of the Caribbean region’s leading players in the tourism industry, but I was completely unaware of the contribution of Russian visitors (158,415 in a single year from a non-traditional market is no joke for a Caribbean island).

    I also await with much interest whatever major impact the new Chinese travelers may have on the Caribbean; that is, if they choose to visit this region (there are so many alternative tourism destinations worldwide!).


    Comment


    • #3
      I've visited the DR about 5 times, and as mentioned here previously, there are charted flights from Russia daily to that country. We need fi get into the game, before it leaves us behind.
      Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

      Comment


      • #4
        Meanwhile...

        If you’re black, go back

        By Reginald Dumas


        Story Created: Oct 10, 2013 at 8:14 PM ECT
        Story Updated: Oct 10, 2013 at 8:17 PM ECT

        In March 2007 Amnesty International (AI) published a report which stated that some 20-30,000 Haitians were expelled every year from the Dominican Republic (DR) and that many of these expulsions breached international human rights law. Haitians and Dominico-Haitians were often rounded up and deported with no chance of appeal, purely on the basis of their skin colour (my emphasis). Many had valid work permits and visas, and some were in fact Dominicans with no family ties to Haiti (my emphasis).
        In my 2008 book, An encounter with Haiti: notes of a Special Adviser, I referred to the AI report and added: “Dominican children of Haitian ancestry (who...are not considered citizens of the DR) face barriers when they try to obtain a birth certificate, and without that document they are unable to study beyond the primary level. They are also unable to claim an identity card when they turn 18, and are thus barred from the formal job market and from voting. Since parents without documents cannot register their children, many thousands are effectively stateless, and they in turn perpetuate the cycle of deprivation of rights... (This) policy of exclusion...bears many of the hallmarks of past South African apartheid...”
        Now, five years later, comes the September 23 ruling of the DR Constitutional Court that “the provision of citizenship in the 1929 DR Constitution, which recognises as a citizen anyone born in the country, should not apply to the children of parents who were not ‘legal residents’ at the time of their birth, on the basis that their parents were ‘in transit’” (Open Society Justice Initiative press release, October 2). In transit! From where to where? From Haiti to the US, via the DR? Or from Haiti to Haiti?
        But we shouldn’t be surprised, because the DR Supreme Court had already found in December 2005 that children of illegal immigrants (the DR code phrase for Haitians and Haitian-origin Dominicans) could not become citizens because they were—what else— “in transit”, and thus ineligible.


        The Constitutional Court has widened the net: parents, grandparents and great-grandparents are now trapped, all the way back to 1929. Several hundred thousand persons in the DR have suddenly been rendered stateless: they are not citizens of the DR, they are not citizens of Haiti. But they are black. They must go back—to a country which most of them didn’t come from, and which they do not know. By all means work in the cane fields and on the coffee plantations and in the brothels of the DR. But go back, or move along; you are “in transit”.
        There is nothing new under the Hispaniola sun. In Why the cocks fight, her 1999 book on relations between Haiti and the Dominican Republic (DR), Michele Wucker says that when she told her landlady in Santo Domingo she was doing research on Haiti, the latter sniffed, then “lifted her long white finger, tapped her freckled forearm, and whispered that Haitians were so black, black as a telephone.”
        I recounted that story in my 2008 book. And I went on: “That of course is the root of the problem, however differently some Dominicans might try to explain it away. Drugs, yes; illegal entry, yes. But people always, for whatever reason, find others to look down on. Frequently, that reason is race and/or skin shade. For the Dominican, the Haitian is not merely a social inferior, he is a racial inferior. Black as a telephone.”
        I said also: “The Dominican, contemptuous of the Haitian, yet has come to depend on the latter’s labour, especially since it is labour scorned by Dominicans and provided by Haitians at rock-bottom rates, in domestic service, the cane fields, etc. And, of course, one must never forget the benefits—what else could they be?—of prostitution.
        To a significant degree, all these services are furnished by children, in whose movement to the DR from Haiti there is a thriving trade—about 30,000 annually, the UN and the OAS estimate. Abuse, sexual and other, is rampant.”
        Caricom, other than a bloodless statement from the Secretary-General (who was apparently speaking in his personal capacity), has not, at this writing, uttered a syllable on the September 23 ruling that so gravely affects a member state. But Caricom can find the time and fortitude to talk about chemical weapons in Syria! It is highly ironic that at a moment when the organisation—for reasons that escape me—has deemed the issue of reparations for African slavery to be of primordial importance, it holds its tongue when the descendants of those African-Haitian slaves who fought courageously and successfully for their independence over 200 years ago are subjected to a new system of slavery. But we should live in positive anticipation. Perhaps, who knows, Caricom is quietly drawing up a claim for reparations from the DR?


        The DR is a member of Cariforum and has, so I hear, expressed an interest in joining Caricom. A serious organisation would not even entertain such an idea while the DR’s contemptuous and racially-driven denial of human rights to Haitians and Dominico-Haitians on its territory continues.
        In the meantime, we must hear the voices of Caricom leaders, raised loud in protest and action. Where is Ralph Gonsalves, the reparations protagonist who was so voluble in 2004 at the forced departure of Jean-Bertrand Aristide from Haiti, and who is to be the Caricom chairman from January 1 next year? Where is Kenny Anthony? Denzil Douglas? Where indeed is Caricom?


        • Reginald Dumas is a former
        ambassador and head of
        the Public Service

        Comment


        • #5
          Dominican Republic has always been very biased toward their own black and Haitians, doesn't surprise me. Let us see what Caricom will do.
          • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

          Comment


          • #6
            Caricom? Please.

            Comment


            • #7
              Lol

              Originally posted by Exile View Post
              Caricom? Please.
              Lol, Exile. I certainly share your obvious view on this, boss. CARICOM indeed [*snicker*]!!

              Comment


              • #8
                The Dominican government is currently analyzing the birth certificates of more than 16,000 people, while electoral authorities have refused to issue identity documents to 40,000 people of Haitian descent.
                "To all of a sudden be told no, you're not Dominican, it's very frustrating," said Elmo Bida Joseph, a 21-year-old student who said he was denied his ID and a copy of his birth certificate because he was born to Haitian migrants.

                http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/0...n_4002844.html
                Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

                Comment


                • #9
                  Historians estimate that anywhere between 9,000 and 20,000 Haitians were killed in the Dominican Republic on the orders of the Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo.
                  Bodies were dumped in the Massacre River, ominously named after an earlier colonial struggle between the Spanish and French

                  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-19880967
                  Winning means you're willing to go longer, work harder, and give more than anyone else - Vince Lombardi

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