BELIZE CITY- Even on election day, there is
little noise in Belize's biggest city above the whirring of
ceiling fans, squawking tropical birds and the Creole chatter of
women in the porches of colonial-era clapboard houses.
With its tiny population and oppressive
Caribbean heat, Belize is famous among backpackers for being one
of the world's most laid-back nations.
Visitors feel their pulses slow in this
corner of Central America where the sticky air smells of fruit
trees and locals greet you on the street in a lilting Creole
accent.
"There is no hustle and bustle here, that's
just the way it is. There is nothing to rush about in Belize,"
said Leroy Castillo, 46, sitting outside the "Bliss Institute"
arts center where he works as a sound technician.
A former British colony populated largely by
Mestizos and Creoles, descendents of African slaves in the
logging industry, Belize wallows in its mellow mood. It listens
to Love FM radio and the government's radio station is called
"Positive Vibes".
Reggae music pumps through Belize's
palm-fringed cayes, and in Belize City, whose population of
70,000 is ten times bigger than the capital Belmopan's, police
in short-sleeved shirts cycle past shops called "Lavish" or
"Charisma".
"Belize is a very nice and cool place," says
policeman Derek Gideon, cycling by pink, turquoise and yellow
wood-front buildings with white picket fences and swinging
wooden signs.
The election brought people out to campaign
rallies, but as many were there for flowing beer and reggaeton
bands as for political speeches. Campaign T-shirts bore slogans
like "Deh Wid Dean" ("We're with Dean") for opposition leader
Dean Barrow and young women cut theirs down into tight
mini-dresses.
"We are the party of love," Prime Minister
Said Musa told a cheering crowd this week. Riots in 2005 over
Musa's tax hikes were only the third case of civil unrest in
Belize's history.
Belize lives mainly off tourists and farming,
but relies too on remittances sent by relatives in the United
States. Despite the lure of its jungles and beaches, Belize lags
far behind tourism giants like Mexico and Costa Rica.
Coastal Garifuna communities, descended from
shipwrecked African slaves and Arawak Indians, are well placed
to cash in on eco-tourism, traditions such as basket-weaving,
and bottom-waggling "punta" music, but instead they struggle to
survive on small-scale fishing.
"In one sense Americans might be pushy and
expect too much, but when I came back here I found my workers
were too laid-back and got upset when I pushed them," said
Jeanette Neal, who runs a guest house after a long stockbroking
career in New York.
"It's so slow sometimes it drives me crazy and I think it's
why we're not as far ahead as we should be." -Reuters