With its rainforest-cloaked mountains and “glorious” sugar-sand beaches, Grenada is one of the loveliest islands in the Caribbean, and yet it sees relatively few visitors, said Tim Moore in the Financial Times.
That has less to do with its isolated position (it lies in the far south of the Lesser Antilles, only 100 miles from Venezuela) than it does with the socialist revolution that gripped it in 1979. The revolution’s leader, Maurice Bishop, is still held in high regard by many locals today. But he was killed by hardliners in 1983, and while the US invasion that followed ushered in “an enduring era of low-key conservative rule”, the island’s “traumatic history” probably spooked investors. Only now are things changing, with the opening of several new luxury resorts around the island’s coast.
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Publish date : 2024-10-18 12:59:00
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