KEJAN HAYNES
Lead Editor – Newsgathering
Former tourism minister Randall Mitchell has accused the Minister of Culture of misleading the country in her presentation of Carnival statistics, as fresh data from the Central Statistical Office and a Freedom of Information request outlines a more detailed picture of visitor arrivals.
He said, “In their haste to pat themselves on the back and deliver a positive narrative, the Ministers of Trade and Tourism and Culture have totally misled the country on the Carnival statistics.”
The issue stems from the dates visitor arrivals from Carnival have been historically measured. Mitchell argues the count begins 19 days before Ash Wednesday. However the government figures began from January 1st, which was 44 days before Ash Wednesday this year.
He said, “What we are dealing with here is not a debate about which Carnival is more successful than the other. It is about whether the country is being given accurate and honest data to build upon for the future.”
Mitchell pointed to conflicting figures released by officials and agencies. He said Tourism Trinidad Limited, supported by line minister Satyakama Maharaj, reported on 25 February that 54,000 visitors came for Carnival.
He added, “Then the Minister [Michelle] Benjamin claimed 37,000 visitors, and on another occasion again claimed 54,000 visitors came for Carnival. Both claims were false and misleading.”
Background data from the Immigration Division, obtained through a Freedom of Information request by Wendell Eversley, shows that 48,491 people arrived in Trinidad and Tobago during the 19 days leading up to Ash Wednesday 2026, from 30 January to 17 February.
Air travel accounted for nearly all arrivals, with 48,441 passengers entering by air.
Of the total arrivals, 31,852 were classified as bona fide visitors, 16,175 were returning nationals, 184 were returning residents, and 280 were returning residents living abroad.
Arrivals were heavily concentrated at Piarco International Airport, which recorded 30,511 bona fide visitors, compared with 1,315 at ANR Robinson International Airport.
The Immigration Division classifies “visitor arrival” status based on the purpose of visit declared by passengers on their arrival and departure cards.
Cruise ship passengers are treated as transit passengers rather than landed visitors. While 5,826 people were on board vessels that docked at local ports, the figure does not indicate how many disembarked.
Mitchell said official data from the Immigration Division and the Central Statistical Office presents a different picture from the figures publicly shared.
He said the CSO reported a decline in visitor spending and arrivals.
He said, “The CSO indicated that total visitor expenditure was down from last year by close to $40 million, or approximately 10%. Carnival visitor arrivals were also down by close to 10%, from 34,194 in 2025 to 31,358 in 2026.”
Mitchell called on stakeholders to rely on consistent methodology for planning.
He said, “The Carnival stakeholders should remain grateful for the consistency in the application of the methodology by the CSO. Future planning depends on the veracity of that data.”
He warned against altering benchmarks to present improved outcomes.
He said, “Hopefully, the Ministers of Tourism and Culture, as well as Tourism Trinidad, will learn that you cannot change the measuring stick and then claim a better result.”
