Mayan Ruins in Guatemala Could Become a U.S.-Funded-Tourist Attraction
The development would include hotels, restaurants, and a miniature train to transport tourists along ancient Mayan highways.
JL
By Julia Lindau
June 17, 2020, 3:35pm
EL MIRADOR, Guatemala Deep in a dense, tropical Guatemalan forest lies the ancient Mayan city of El Mirador. Its more than 2,000 years old, but there's a big debate now over who gets to dictate its future, as well as that of the surrounding jungle: local communities, or scientists who want to turn it into a U.S.-funded tourist attraction.
On one side of the battle is Dr. Richard Hansen. An American archeologist who's dedicated much of his life to El Mirador, he has been trying to build a privately-managed park in the area for the last 20 years. It would involve building hotels, restaurants, and a miniature train on top of ancient Mayan highways to transport tourists in and out of the jungle and to different ruins.
Hansen says the development would protect the ruins and jungle a UNESCO-designated forest called the Maya Biosphere Reserve more effectively than the Guatemalan state is willing or able to.
The people who actually live in the reserve, on the other hand, say if Hansen's motive were truly conservation, he'd support the successful conservation model already in place. That model, the Forestry Concession System, allows local communities to live off the forest in exchange for guarding it from loggers and drug traffickers. It has decreased deforestation rates and earned the support of international environmental groups, U.S. agencies like USAID and the Department of Interior, and former Guatemalan governments.
More:
https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/889qpz/mayan-ruins-in-guatemala-could-become-a-us-funded-tourist-attraction