Home » Featured, Mexico Economy, Tourism

It’s time for Mexico’s Calderón to act against Canada

25 August 2009 593 views One Comment

By: Alvin Starkman M.A., LL.B.
As much as president Felipe Calderón is doing to combat drug trafficking in Mexico, he’s doing little if anything to combat Canadian anti-Mexico sentiment. And the result has been taking an enormous toll on tourism to previously popular Mexican tourist destinations. Now is the most opportune time for Calderón to strike back. In 2006, Canadian travel advisories were rampant against travel to the southern state of Oaxaca as a result of civil unrest there, despite the fact that no Canadian (or American) tourist was harmed or even threatened – videographer Bradley Will was not a tourist but rather a videographer electing to embed himself, camera in hand, with the far left in the midst of conflict with government troops. Just a few months ago Canada did it again, telling its citizens to not venture to Mexico because of the swine flu. Mexico just sits back, while its economy continues to take hits to the head. Just recently The Toronto Star’s Linda Diebel scared the heck out of Canadians through her series of articles about the Mexican drug trade. She began by tracing the problem to conflict and violence in Canada’s most western province, British Columbia. So where was Calderón? Should he not have been issuing warnings to his people against venturing to war-ravaged British Coloumia? Or better yet to all of Canada? After all, during the 2006 conflict Canadian warnings were for the entire state despite the fact that the conflict was by and large restricted to three municipalities around the capital. Tourism was seriously impacted at the popular Pacific Coast beach destinations of Puerto Escondido and Huatulco. And where has he been more recently, with new statistics regarding reported cases of swine flu indicating 20 per 100,000 Canadian residents, yet only about 7 per 100,000 of his own countrymen? Should he not be warning against travel to Canada? “Stay on the American side of Niagara Falls, folks, where reported swine flu cases are no more than they are here in Mexico.” The most recent example of the Mexican government’s lackadaisical approach to tourism and Canada is how it has sat back and let the new visa requirements pass, without significant protest. At least the Czech Republic had the cajones to make a statement, through its actions. Isn’t it time for Mexico to strike back against Canada, for all that the Canadian government and its journalists have done to adversely affect travel to Mexico? A plea to President Calderón: teach a lesson to Canadians who rely on tourism from Mexico for their livelihood. You’ve got the swine flu, the visa requirements, B.C.’s drug violence – and just take a look at the Greater Toronto Area pages of The Toronto Star newspaper, every day, if you want to see how dangerous it is in Toronto; teen killings, children disappearing, and the continual violence in the northwest corridor of Toronto known as Jane-Finch. Just one strong travel advisory should teach Canada a lesson, and convince its weak and impressionable Prime Minister Harper to think, independent of the U.S., before he acts. Former Toronto resident Alvin Starkman now resides in Oaxaca, where he operates Casa Machaya Oaxaca Bed & Breakfast (http://www.oaxacadream.com), boasting all the attributes of downtown Oaxaca hotels, with the quaintness and personal touch of country inn style accommodations. Alvin is also a writer and tour guide, taking couples and families to the ruins, craft villages and market towns in Oaxaca’s central valleys.

One Comment »

  • Janie Horwitz said:

    I am not really sure if what the reporter in Canada had to say was the real reason people are not coming to Mexico. The housing in the U.S. has taken a real dive. I can buy property on or near the Atlantic ocean, right here in U.S. for the same price they are now selling in Mexico. We just came back from Mexico a few mo. ago, and found it to be as charming as our last visit. But so many young families are very worried about our own bad economy here. Jobs are not as stable as they were, plus businesses are leaving to other states. People are really not traveling any where right now, cause they are scared!! We have swine flu here, as I imagine, so has Canada. Hopefully things will improve and we will all be able to feel assured once more. Good luck to you and may we all prosper together…Sincerely

Leave your response!

Add your comment below, or trackback from your own site. You can also subscribe to these comments via RSS.

Be nice. Keep it clean. Stay on topic. No spam.

You can use these tags:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

This is a Gravatar-enabled weblog. To get your own globally-recognized-avatar, please register at Gravatar.