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Cuba says tourism up 15 percent this year

  • Story Highlights
  • Number of international visitors tops 1 million this week, state-controlled media says
  • Foreign tourists peaked in 2005, slipped last year, according to official statistics
  • Communist country has turned to tourism for much of its hard currency revenue
  • Canada, Britain, Spain and Italy rank as top sources of visitors to Caribbean island
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HAVANA, Cuba (AP) -- Cuba said Wednesday that its crucial tourism industry appears to be recovering from a two-year slump, with a 15 percent increase in visitors during the first quarter of the year.

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A Cuban man visits with tourists on the beach this month in Varadero, a resort town east of Havana.

The number of international visitors topped the 1 million mark on Monday, 22 days faster than last year, state-controlled news media reported.

Officials credited well-attended conferences and trade fairs for the increase, singling out an ongoing gathering dedicated to cultural tourism that has attracted more than 1,000 visitors.

Maria Elena Lopez, a vice minister of tourism, reported a 15 percent increase in foreign visitors this year compared with the first three months of 2007, but she did not provide further data, according to the Communist Party daily Granma.

The number of foreign tourists peaked at about 2.32 million in 2005, but slipped to 2.15 last year, according to official statistics.

Officials said the decline of 70,000 visitors in 2007 cut revenues by nearly $14.5 million below 2006 levels -- a blow to a nation that has turned to tourism to generate much of its hard currency revenue.

Washington's nearly 50-year-old trade embargo prohibits American tourists from coming to Cuba. Canada, Britain, Spain and Italy rank as top sources of visitors to the island.

Raśl Castro succeeded his brother Fidel as president in February and promptly dropped bans that had kept ordinary Cubans from staying at luxury hotels and renting cars, which might help bolster tourism during off months when fewer foreign visitors come. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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