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- <text id=93TT2101>
- <title>
- Aug. 23, 1993: Holidays in Hell
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 23, 1993 America The Violent
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TRAVEL, Page 50
- Holidays in Hell
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In their quest for tourist dollars, the most dangerous and backward
- countries are beckoning to travelers
- </p>
- <p>By KEVIN FEDARKO--With reporting by Lisa Beyer/Gush Katif, Elizabeth Lea/London, Richard
- Hornik/Phnom Penh, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> You drool over the alluring brochures. Ah, the pristine beaches.
- Elegant cafes. Spectacular mountain scenery. It all sounds great.
- Then you look at the fine print: the beaches are in the poverty-racked
- Gaza Strip, the cafes in bombed-out Dubrovnik, the mountains
- in war-torn eastern Turkey. They have got to be kidding.
- </p>
- <p> But they're not. Witness the experience of British engineer
- David Rowbottom and his Australian cousin Tania Miller, who
- were entranced by the promise of dramatic vistas in Turkey until
- they found themselves staring down the gun barrels of insurgents
- from the Kurdistan Workers Party, a guerrilla group lately kidnapping
- tourists as part of its war for independence. After packing
- Rowbottom and Miller around the backcountry for five weeks to
- avoid searches by the Turkish army, the guerrillas freed the
- couple last week. Rowbottom and Miller expressed relief at being
- released alive and unharmed. They did not indicate, however,
- whether they had heard the Central Asian proverb "Travel is
- a foretaste of hell."
- </p>
- <p> And so it can be--especially for wanderers smitten by places
- they ought to think twice about: where quaint cultures run up
- against armored jeeps charging through city streets, where emergency
- travel kits had best include not just a bottle of Lomotil but
- also a bulletproof vest. The surprise is not that such dangers
- exist but that so many of the countries where they are commonplace
- want you to spend your vacation there. In the relentless quest
- for the tourist dollar, even places like Kashmir (400 civilians
- killed last month) and North Korea (no casualties, but why go?)
- are advertising their supposed charms. "Be a Chinese soldier
- for a day" gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "military
- tour." "Visit Shibam, famous for its exquisite Yemenite architecture."
- Oops, forgot to mention the bands of armed tribesmen who routinely
- kidnap Westerners. "Revel in the spectacular scenery of Vietnam's
- China Beach." Regret that most hotels are Stalinist-style tenements
- built by the Soviets.
- </p>
- <p> Some of these unusual holiday destinations are paradise spots
- overtaken by war and now struggling to revive their once thriving
- tourist trades. Others have no such amenities but keenly understand
- that tourism can create jobs and raise cash faster than almost
- any other industry. And then there are those corners of the
- world that are saddled with unfortunate reputations yet offer
- fascinating, if decidedly inconvenient, experiences.
- </p>
- <p> Venturing into a quasi-war zone such as Cambodia is a traveler's
- gamble. A group of Mexican tourists recently spotted in the
- lobby of Phnom Penh's sole luxury hotel were snapping pictures
- of a wooden model of Angkor Wat, the country's famous 9th century
- temple complex--as close as they would get to the real thing.
- Just days before, Khmer Rouge guerrillas had attacked Siem Reap,
- the city next to the ruins, and the group's guide refused to
- go near the place. The Mexicans were forced to content themselves
- with Phnom Penh--a city whose attractions include the Tuol
- Sleng Museum, a high school used as a torture chamber and prison
- during Pol Pot's reign. Tourists who do make it to Angkor Wat
- are repeatedly reminded to stay on the paths; hundreds of Khmer
- Rouge land mines are buried around the temples. It is also advisable
- to give the Kalashnikov-toting militia men "guarding" the complex
- a dollar or two for their services--so they don't steal all
- your money.
- </p>
- <p> A bit too risky? Then how about a getaway to the Gaza Strip?
- Most people think of this section of the Israeli-occupied territories
- as a wretched, raging refugee camp. But it also offers a gorgeous,
- unspoiled slice of Mediterranean beach. The residents of Gush
- Katif, a collection of Jewish settlements on the Strip, bid
- visitors to come and swim, thanks to a new road from the Israeli
- border enabling tourists to skirt rebellious Palestinian villages--and thus reduce the risk of a Molotov cocktail through the
- windshield. Although Gush Katif's Palestinian laborers have
- twice turned on their employers and stabbed two of them to death,
- spokeswoman Datya Herskovitz says not to worry: the attacks
- took place in the greenhouse district, not in the residential
- areas where visitors stay. She does caution, though, against
- roaming beyond the confines of Gush Katif. Several months ago,
- an Israeli businessman took a wrong turn into a Palestinian
- refugee camp and was shot dead.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the most surprising thing is that many travelers do
- their best to seek out infamous mayhem. Which may explain the
- explosion of tourism in Northern Ireland, where the 24-year
- feud between Protestants and Catholics offers a kind of terrorism
- theme park. So great is the demand that Sinn Fein, the Irish
- Republican Army's political wing, keeps running out of its "freedom
- map" of West Belfast, which pinpoints the cemetery where hunger
- striker Bobby Sands is buried, British obser vation posts,
- and the "peace line," a concrete barricade separating the city's
- Catholic and Protestant districts. Tourists who follow the route
- can watch young boys from both sides of the wall catapult rocks
- onto their unseen neighbors.
- </p>
- <p> Serious connoisseurs of violence, however, should call Mas
- simo Beyerle in La Spezia, Italy, who is accepting bookings
- for his October War Zone tour of Lebanon. For $25,000, travelers
- can spend two weeks hunting for shrapnel in the Syrian-controlled
- Bekaa Valley, visiting the scene of the U.S. Marine barracks
- blown up in 1983 and dining in a Palestinian refugee camp. Beyerle
- says he also plans trips to Nicaragua, Somalia and parts of
- the former Soviet Union.
- </p>
- <p> Traditionally, one of Europe's cheapest destinations has been
- Yugoslavia's Dalmatian coast, which once brought $2 billion
- a year into the province, now the Republic, of Croatia. But
- that was before war ravaged charming ports such as Dubrovnik.
- Croatian tourist officials are now repairing damaged buildings
- and discreetly moving refugees from beach hotels into the interior.
- Still, recovery is slow: car-rental agencies in neighboring
- countries have inserted into their contracts clauses canceling
- insurance the minute their vehicles enter Croatia.
- </p>
- <p> The ardor with which spurned suitors such as Croatia are seeking
- travelers is matched only by the enthusiasm of countries that
- have never had much luck attracting visitors. Two years ago,
- in an effort to dramatize his country's openness, Libyan leader
- Muammar Gaddafi personally bulldozed a customs house on the
- Egyptian border. The invitation was ignored. Earlier this May,
- Gaddafi retailored his message to welcome foreign firms interested
- in developing the country's exquisite but deserted beaches and
- superb collection of classical antiquities. What the colonel
- neglected to mention is that U.N. sanctions ban international
- flights to the country. Thirsty travelers who brave the long
- drive across the desert from Egypt or Tunisia will arrive to
- discover that alcohol is totally prohibited and that even water
- is in short supply.
- </p>
- <p> Those who respond to the call of such adventures may well return
- home convinced that the Central Asians didn't get their proverb
- quite right. Done properly, this kind of travel is no "foretaste
- of hell." It's the real thing.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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