The world’s least-visited country is stunning
IT HAD just 6000 visitors last year, making it the least-visited country on the planet. But are we all missing out on something amazing?
IS IT just us, or is the world’s least-visited country actually one of the most beautiful places to ever exist?
Kiribati (pronounced kiri-bas) had just 6000 visitors last year — this makes it the least-visited country on Earth for which data is available from the United Nations World Tourism Organization.
But Kiribati should have many, MANY more passers-by, if these photos have anything to say about it.
The beaches are so sprawling, the water so blissfully clear, and the vegetation so verdantly tropical that this paradise is an ideal — and severely underappreciated — island escape.
Kiribati is a string of 33 islands way out in the Pacific Ocean. A small nation all its own, Kiribati has quaint, tropical lodges to house the brave souls who trek here for top-notch diving, surfing, swimming and record-breaking game fishing.
Japanese and American forces battled at Kiribati’s main islands during World War II, so you can visit the site of the battle, or examine 20 centimetre coastal defence guns and solid concrete bunkers left from World War II.
Kiribati’s tourism website also says that shipwrecks, and rusted crafts can be seen on the shores during low tide.
This place is fascinating, but perhaps its lack of visitors is due to inaccessibility: flights are scarce, though Fiji Airways has a return weekly service to Kiribati between Nadi, Fiji and Honolulu, Hawaii. Once you get to Kiribati, though, a land of relaxation, beauty and history awaits.
The worst part, though, is that Kiribati is quickly disappearing. The nation recently purchased 2428 hectares of land from Fiji, presumably so Kiribati’s citizens can eventually relocate before the effects of climate change overtake their precarious island nation.
We’re on our way, Kiribati!
This article originally appeared in The Huffington Post and was republished with permission.