Video shows destructive side of Jamaica’s tourism industry

KINGSTON, Jamaica – The Jamaica Environmental Trust on Thursday night launched “Jamaica for Sale,” a 92 minute video documentary highlighting disturbing issues behind the island’s normally rosy sun, s

KINGSTON, Jamaica – The Jamaica Environmental Trust on Thursday night launched “Jamaica for Sale,” a 92 minute video documentary highlighting disturbing issues behind the island’s normally rosy sun, sea and sand tourism image.

“We want to raise hard questions about the tourism industry, especially in light of the recent rise in a certain kind of tourism. There are costs. We are asking questions about these costs,” said Diana McCaulay, chief executive officer of Jamaica Environmental Trust.

The video features the faces and voices of Jamaicans and other Caribbean personalities talking about life in the wake of a burst of construction of mega-hotels across Jamaica’s coastline. The film shows how gains from tourism development come at a high price to the people.

“Government is selling of beaches and sometimes entire islands. This cuts off local citizens from having a say in what happens around them,” said Mimi Sheller, a sociologist from Swarthmore College in the United States.

The film features small hoteliers and other citizens talking about the wide scale removal of the mangroves, wetlands and the breeding grounds of indigenous birds and turtles.

Early in the film, construction workers detail the ill-treatment and low wages they receive from the Spanish hotel developers.

Others mentioned the lack of support structures for the developments such as transportation and housing for the hotel workers.

One settler testified about the suffering she endures after her eviction from the home she and her family inhabited for generations. All of these things were done to make way for hotel development.

Craft vendors and small business operators describe the loss of business and lack of support from all-inclusive resort operators. Some complain that visitors are warned that they would be robbed if they venture into the towns.

Fishermen gave startling and even unintentionally humorous testimonies about the disappearance of the fish caused by mega-hotel developments on the coast, and about fisher folks’ futile attempts to find new fishing grounds.

“The hotel dem a follow we everywhere we go,” says Troy Jumpp, fisherman from the Whitehouse Fisherfolk Co-operative. There was irony too as even the hoteliers in coastal properties complain about the lack of fish and other species in the seas their visitors come to enjoy.

Comments from three former Jamaican prime ministers on their tourism development policies are interspersed throughout the film.

Political representatives, social scientists and economists weighed in on the issue, speaking about the “slavery” conditions of the workers, the lack of economic benefit to the poorer people and great developments fronting squalor.

“Jamaica for Sale” shows how places of historical significance are disappearing to make way for cruise ship facilities. This will happen to Falmouth, a town in northern Jamaica that is the site of centuries old forts, churches and markets once so prosperous that it had running water before New York City.

“Jamaica for Sale” shows security guards chasing locals from beaches which were once free to them – while the soundtrack features a popular Calypsonian singing, “This beach is mine.”

But it is not just the beaches. In one village, the waste management plant from a prominent hotel causes a perpetual stink in the community, and the residents lament that apparently nothing is in the works to stop it.

Regarding the damage from tourists themselves, “Jamaica For Sale” points out that the average tourist drinks 10 times more water and produces three times more waste than locals. Tourism also demands high usage of energy derived from fossil fuels, which has implications for climate change.

“Jamaica for Sale” shows how local people are being cut off, penned in and denied their voice – all in the name of tourism development. The video places a major emphasis on the real price of tourism development.

“Jamaica for Sale” was produced with a budget of US$30,000 contributed by donors such the United States Embassy and individuals Louis Slesin, Bryan Langford, Maxine Burkett, Josh Stanboro, William Whitman and Meleanna Meyer.

Film-maker Esther Figueroa of Vagabond Media co-produced “Jamaica for Sale” for free.

McCaulay hopes to make the video widely available to schools and other audiences both locally and internationally. At the video launch event Thursday, she appealed for more financial support to make that happen.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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