Michael Baker, left, and Nick Smith

 

GUY ELLIS | Associated Press
CASTRIES, St. Lucia — A robbery and assault on three gay American tourists at their vacation cottage has St. Lucia officials scrambling to assure visitors that the southern Caribbean island is safe and welcoming for LGBT tourists.
Tourism Minister Allen Chastanet issued an apology Monday to three men from Atlanta after masked bandits broke into their mountain rental home in Soufriere. One victim said the gunmen made slurs against gays, white people and Americans during the March 3 assault.
The tiny, tourism-dependent Caribbean country is typically peaceful and a safe place for all kinds of travelers, Chastanet said.
He said the attack was “unacceptable behavior and our destination will not tolerate it.”
Police announced Monday that they have arrested two suspects in the assault and are looking for three more.
This former British territory is not known as a risky place for gays, particularly compared with other, socially conservative Caribbean islands where many gays are not open about their sexuality.
Nonetheless, a victim who detailed his account of the robbery on Facebook said he believes the attack was “partly a gay bashing.”
Michael Baker said he and his companion, Nick Smith, were showering when they heard their friend Todd Wiggins scream in another part of the home. When Baker stepped out of the bathroom, he saw masked men beating Wiggins.
Baker said the armed bandits ultimately beat all three and tied them up.
“They began to tell us that they hated white people. They hated (gays),” Baker wrote. “They told us they had been watching us, and they hated us, and wanted us off the island. They said they would kill us if we did not leave.”
After the attackers left, the men freed themselves, hiked down the mountain and were helped by some British tourists, Baker said.
Police said the robbers took about $1,800 in cash and some personal items. One of the men was treated for minor injuries at a hospital, and they all left St. Lucia soon after.
Baker did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent through Facebook, and phone calls to Atlanta phone listings under that name were not returned.
On his profile page, Baker said he and his friends will struggle with memories of the assault.
“I don’t know the full motivation that drove these five men, but I do know that I can feel pity for them,” he said.