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The site of a horrific cult massacre, which saw the deaths of over 900 people, has been controversially opened to tourists.
The site of the Jonestown cult massacre, where more than 900 people died, has opened to tourists in the latest dark tourism ...
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Newser on MSNTourists Find Little Left at JonestownNearly 50 years after the Jonestown massacre shocked the world, the site of one of history's deadliest cult tragedies is now ...
Private tourism group offering (controversial) guided tours of site of Jim Jones' Peoples Temple in Guyana after decades of ...
Both American survivors of the mass suicide and murder and Guyanese have criticized the tour. But defenders say the site ...
Mark Phillips outlined the substantial progress the Guyana’s tourism industry has made over the last five years and reaffirmed the Government’s commitment to building a world-class, sustainable ...
PRIME Minister Brigadier (Ret’d), the Honourable Mark Phillips has outlined the substantial progress Guyana’s tourism ...
Inspiring to imagine but nightmarish to live in, these failed communes have become cautionary tales in hubris and ego.
Congressman Leo Ryan went to Guyana in 1978 to investigate reports of American cult leader Jim Jones holding hundreds of his followers captive. Ryan didn't make it out of Jonestown alive.
Jim Jones led 900 followers to their deaths. A new tour revisits the history. The Jonestown massacre remains ‘a stain’ on Guyana nearly 50 years later, but tourism plans are meeting backlash.
Vilchez, 67, said Guyana has every right to profit from any plans related to Jonestown. "Then on the other hand, I just feel like any situation where people were manipulated into their deaths ...
A tour operator is planning to turn Jonestown, a remote area in Guyana surrounded by jungle where more than 900 people died under the direction of cult leader Jim Jones, into a tourist destination.
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