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    16
    Mar
    2013
    5:12am, EDT

    Gunmen kill 6 at bar in Mexico resort town of Cancun; 5 wounded

    By Isela Serrano, Elinor Comlay and Mohammad Zargham, Reuters

    MEXICO CITY -- Two men armed with a machine gun and a handgun opened fire in a bar on the outskirts of the Mexican tourist resort of Cancun on Thursday, killing six people and wounding five, the office of the state's attorney general said.

    Cancun, a major tourist destination on Mexico's Caribbean coast, has largely escaped the drug-related violence that has racked Acapulco, a faded tourist hot spot on the Pacific coast.

    Last month, six Spanish women were raped by hooded gunmen who forced their way into the Acapulco beach house the women had rented.

    Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto has vowed to reduce the violence that soared after his predecessor, Felipe Calderon, launched an assault on drug cartels.

    More than 70,000 people have been killed in drug-related violence in Mexico since 2007.

    Related:

    6 arrested in Acapulco tourists' rape

    PhotoBlog: Church bricks up windows, installs warning system amid Mexico violence

    Slideshow: Narco culture permeates Mexico, leaks across border

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    316 comments

    with their extreme gun control laws nobody can defend themselves ... coming soon to a country near you

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mexico, violence, shooting, cancun, bar, resort, featured, drug-cartel
  • 16
    Apr
    2012
    10:36am, EDT

    Tunisia still wants sun lovers, new Islamist government says

    Lionel Bonaventure / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Tourists look at the sea in Sidi Bou Said on October 19, 2011, days before a historic national election in Tunisia.

    By Reuters and Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Sun worshippers are welcome on Tunisia's beaches even though an Islamist government now runs the Mediterranean country which relies heavily on tourism to fill its coffers, its prime minister said on Monday.

    "We will respect the traditions of our visitors in their food, and clothing and lifestyle," Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali said at a conference to promote tourism held on the island of Djerba, known for its white sandy beaches and luxury spas.


    As if to reinforce his message, a wide selection of alcoholic beverages was on offer at the opening ceremony of the tourism conference on Sunday night.

    That message is in stark contrast to neighboring Libya, which earlier this year told msnbc.com it does not intend to follow Tunisia and Morocco down the road of mass tourism and relatively widespread alcohol sales.

    Jebali's moderate Islamist Ennahda party took power at the head of a coalition in an election after last year's revolution, which ousted veteran leader Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali and sparked the Arab Spring.

    Could sun-soaked Libya be the Mediterranean's next tourism hot spot?

    Tunisia, which relies on tourism for almost 7 percent of its gross domestic product, saw visitor numbers and tourist revenues drop by more than a third after the revolution.

    "Unfortunately, some want to paint Tunisia as a jungle and sow fear of the Ennahda government but this does not reflect reality and the proof is that these critics speak freely," Jebali told journalists on the sidelines of the conference.

    Fethi Belaid / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Residents of Tunisian town of Hammamet hold placards reading "Don't touch my tourism!" as take part in a silent march named "citizen walk in support of tourism " in April 2011.

    About 5 million tourists visited the country last year, down from 7 million in 2010 as fears over security caused tourists to flee or to cancel bookings.

    Tunisia has since made a relatively smooth transition to democracy and tourists are returning to its coastal resorts. But occasional protests and lingering fears that Ennahda will slowly seek to Islamise society have held back the recovery, as has the economic crisis in Europe.

    Jebali said bookings had improved for 2012 and Tunisia hoped to regain its 7 million tourists and top that by encouraging visits to historical, cultural sites and the southern desert.

    In an effort to allay fears that Tunisia would impose sharia, or Islamic law, as some conservative Islamists have demanded, Jebali said a constitution is being drafted that would protect the "civil" nature of the state.

    "We want to reassure everyone and even our own people that there is nothing to fear from freedom and democracy," he said.

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    70 comments

    When I am on vacation I like to sit on a beach chair, not in a foxhole with sandbags. Pass.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, tunisia, tourism, islam, north-africa, resort, arab-spring

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