Tourist Arrivals in Guatemala Up 5.6%
                                  
                        GUATEMALA CITY – Tourist visits to Guatemala  grew 5.6 percent last year compared with 2009, while the country’s  tourism revenues increased 6.2 percent, the Guatemalan Tourism Institute  said.
The institute’s head of market research, Francisco  Chaverri, told a press conference that 1,875,777 tourists visited the  country last year compared with 1,776,868 in 2009.
Chaverri said  half of the visitors were from Central American countries, 34 percent  from North America, 10 percent from Europe, 3 percent from South America  and the remaining 3 percent from other regions.
Guatemala City,  colonial Antigua and the archaeological center of Tikal and Atitlan were  the places that attracted the most tourists in 2010, according to  official statistics.
Tourism generated $1.38 billion in Guatemala  last year, superior to the nearly $1.3 billion in 2009, he said.
Chaverri  said that, despite the dampening effects of natural disasters and the  economic crisis, Guatemala’s tourist industry grew within the goals set  by the World Tourism Organization of 5-6 percent.
Growth in 2011  is estimated at between 4 percent and 5 percent, he said.
Tourism  was the third biggest source of foreign currency for Guatemala in 2010  after exports, which brought in more than $8 billion, and remittances  from emigrants amounting to $4.13 billion. EFE
Latin American Herald Tribune - Tourist Arrivals in Guatemala Up 5.6%