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World's worst places: Top 10 places you do not want to visit in 2012
What comes to mind when you think of the world's worst place? While it is easy to complain about rural Wal-marts, La Guardia, Applebee's, and any government office with motor vehicle in its title, none of those places escalate the game from nuisance to immediate danger. All of them can be horrible, yes, but a threatened existence they do not pose.
The places on this list are the bad places. Some have run out of hope. Others have fought war for so long it is the new normal. Most are exceptionally dangerous and heartbreaking. And while none of them are fighting for write-ups by travel bloggers or inspiring travel with the NetJet set, some of these locations may someday be on the travel map. After all, it was not long ago that current hot-spots like Cambodia and Croatia would have made such a list.
Gallery: World's worst cities
10. Harare, Zimbabwe
Recently voted by the Economist as the world's worst city to live in, Harare is a unique study in failed fiscal policy. The once acceptable city fell into disrepair during Zimbabwe's severe bouts with hyperinflation and corruption. The troubles began in the early 21st century when Zimbabwe's inflation rate increased to 112.1%. Sounds terrible right? As it turns out, those were the sunny days. In 2008, the inflation rate peaked at 231,150,000% per annum. In U.S. terms, this means that if you deposited $10,000, it would be worth about 4 thousandths of a U.S. cent in one years time. That sucks. (For the record, 10,000USD = 46.720 quadrillion Zimbabwe dollars in 2009.)
This sort of economic arrangement allowed Harare to fail. There are not enough printers in Zimbabwe to print enough of its Z100 Billion notes, and when a loaf of bread costs trillions, doom is soon to follow. Unemployment grew to 80% and many services faltered. Today, foreign currencies have been adopted but the damage has been done. Much of Harare is in disrepair, and few foreign companies care to directly invest in the troubled city. That said, it is probably the safest place on this list to visit with flights direct from London on the national carrier - Air Zimbabwe.

9. Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea
The lone entry from Oceania is the ultra-diverse Port Moresby of Papua New Guinea. PNG is home to over 820 languages - more than any other country in the world. As such, its capital Port Moresby boasts a diverse crew of opportunists and island cultures. It was recently voted by the Economist as the 137th out of 140 places in the livable cities index, making it a tough place to get by.
Rapes, Murders, and HIV are just a few of the daily tragedies that befall this enclave at the edge of the map. Here, even riding in cars is a dangerous activity. Gangs called Raskols are known to rob vehicles transporting foreigners at gunpoint.
Port Moresby is best used as a temporary gateway to nearby dive sites and for flights to PNG's jungle interior and its solitary treks. Reaching Port Moresby is easy from Australia on PNG's national carrier Air Niugini.
8. Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo
37 years ago, Ali and Foreman traded blows in one of boxing's most historic matches. The match took place in Kinshasa. At the time, the country was known as Zaire, and the future looked hopeful for the mineral-rich nation. But as is common in 20th century African history, corruption at the top derailed the future. The country became a model for African kleptocracy as President Mobutu matched Zaire's national debt with deposits into his personal bank account in Switzerland - to a tune of 4 billion (1980) U.S. dollars. He was forced to flee in the late nineties.
By 1998, the Congo region was engaged in the Second Congo War - the most deadly military conflict since World War II. In the end, over 5 million perished, and to this day the mineral-rich country has a per capita (nominal) GDP of about $186.
Chinese foreign direct investment has allowed Kinshasa to grow into a more reasonable place over the last decade, though it is not yet ready for its tourist close-up. Violence and political instability still ravage the second most populated city in Africa. It has come a long way from the time of Mr. Kurtz, but the heart of Africa is still an exceptionally complicated place. Just a month ago during the presidential election, thousands fled Kinshasa in anticipation of violence, and tanks rolled in to police the streets.
Tens of thousands of orphaned street children call the slums of Kinshasa home and are also routinely accused of witchcraft by locals. Carjackings are one of the more common types of tourist robbery, especially outside of the city center. And one more thing, photography is illegal.
Reaching Kinshasa is easy from Paris on Air France.

7. Rocinha favela, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Rocinha is the largest favela in Rio de Janeiro. While its infrastructure exceeds that of lesser favelas and its view of Rio is truly breathtaking, it is also home to several hundred thousand Brazilians packed onto a steep hillside. It is a playground for modern day little Li'l Zes.
With one of the highest murder rates in the world, Brazil has been cracking down on violence in anticipation of hosting both the Olympics and World Cup. In fact, local authorities have effectively declared war on this slum in an effort to clean it up and push out the drug cartels, and just a few months ago, Rocinha was occupied by the military and police forces. Their aim is to restore government control in the sprawling favela. While progress has no doubt been made, when visiting Rio (which is generally safe), it is wise to avoid favelas unless accompanied by a local guide.

6. Sana'a, Yemen
"Just off the horn of Africa..." is a common statement that generally precedes a story about modern piracy. And just on the other side of the dangerous Gulf of Aden where such piracy goes down is treacherous Yemen - a land frozen in time.
It is a time machine to the modern edge of the Islamic dark ages. On one hand this brings old world Arabian architecture and cultures of antiquity, but on the other, it brings out Islamic fanaticism. It is a place of child brides and a training ground for Al Qaeda. Men walk around freely with weapons per their religious rights, and these weapons range from the ubiquitous Jambiya to battle-worn Kalashnikovs. Sana'a is old, dangerous, and has its share of political unrest. As a westerner, you can keep your travel plans safer by avoiding Yemen.
The tragic thing about Yemen is that it possesses such beautiful sights. It has unbelievable Red Sea beaches, Socotra Island (Similar to the Galapagos and on my own personal travel shortlist), and old forts amid craggy mountains.
Reaching Sana'a, Yemen is possible from Dubai, Doha, London, and Sharjah.
5. West Point, Monrovia, Liberia
Clean water, electricity, basic services - all things we take for granted in the West. In the West Point area of Monrovia, a city named for James Monroe, these are luxuries. West Point, a peninsular slum jutting out into the Atlantic, is home to a special breed of disgusting squalor. Home to 75,000 Monrovians, it is one of Africa's most notorious and crowded slums. Cholera is at an epidemic level, drug use is rampant, teenage prostitution is a commonality, and toilets are scarce. In fact, since it costs money to use neighborhood toilets, many Monrovians in West Point just crap in the streets or on the beach.
Vice did a great series on Liberia a few years ago. In the series, they meet with with an ex-war leader known as General Butt Naked - the commander of a group of child soldiers called the Butt Naked Brigade. He earned this name by charging into battle wearing only sneakers and his AK-47. Aside from sacrificing humans and partaking in cannibalism, he also regularly communicated with the devil. Today, he is a minister.
Delta flies from Atlanta to Monrovia, Liberia.
4. Ciudad Juarez, Mexico
Just as turbulence occurs where hot and cold air meet, similarly a point of human turbulence occurs in this nasty city where Mexico meets the United States. Drug violence, government incompetence, and poverty mix to form what has been called the murder capital of the world (this dishonor has since been ceded to Honduras). As drug wars continue to rage, Juarez continues to be a dangerous place. The drug cartels continue to fight for one of the most valuable things in the world - access to the United States narcotics market.
Neighboring El Paso, oddly, has one of the lowest murder rates in the United States. In fact, among major cities, El Paso is tied with Lincoln, Nebraska for having the lowest murder rate in the United States. It is indeed strange to have such a dichotomy separated by a river.
Flying to Juarez from a number of cities is easy, but don't do it. Go to Cancun and fist pump instead.

3. Cite Soleil, Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Take one of the most damned places on the planet, knock the hell out of it with an earthquake, and you get the worst of Haiti - Cite Soleil. Port-au-Prince is generally a place of ephemeral hope and naked truths, and at its most rotten corner is this heartbreaking slum.
Cite Soleil is one of the largest slums in the northern hemisphere. It is a place where what you see is what you get, and what you see is abject third world poverty. The slum is void of sewers, schools, electricity, or healthcare facilities. It is the kind of place where relief workers are swallowed whole by the earth. In 2007, UN peacekeepers attempted to access the neighborhood and were welcomed with gunfire.
On top of this, many dangerous gang members escaped prison during the earthquake of 2010 and have returned to this crumbling slum. Reach PAP, Haiti from Miami on Insel Air.
2. Kandahar, Afghanistan
Surrounded by gorgeous mountains, it is a tragedy that Kandahar is so awfully dangerous. A one time trading center and strategic foothold, Kandahar is a victim of its perfect location between the world's of East and West. It has been a point of interest since Alexander the Great stumbled upon it in the 4th century BC. For centuries, traders passed through this city when traveling between Asia and Europe. As result, wars have also passed through and control has changed hands over its centuries of existence, from Mongols to Arabs to Brits and beyond.
Kidnappings, suicide bombings, and other criminal activities have turned it into an absolute monster of a destination. War has a way of creating this sort of general lawlessness. Having a 28% national literacy rate does not help matters.
As a weird footnote, Kandahar has an Armani Hotel, though it is not licensed by Giorgio. Its TGI Fridays, once a bastion of Americana and cheese sticks in Afghanistan, has allegedly been shut down. One can reach Kandahar from Dubai on Ariana Afghan Airlines. During Taliban rule, Osama bin Laden used this airline for Al Qaeda operations including the smuggling of guns, money, and opium. Today, sanctions have been lifted against the troubled national carrier.
1. Mogadishu, Somalia
Still crazy after all these years, "Mog" has perhaps the most terrifying disclaimer (ever) hovering above its entry on wikitravel. It states, "Mogadishu is regarded as the most lawless and dangerous city on Earth and is currently experiencing a major food and refugee crisis. It is not safe for leisure or tourism. If you are planning a visit for international aid work, etc, you will need expert advice and planning."
Civil War has raged for decades, and the government controls only a few blocks of the city. It is a base for modern pirates, the backdrop for the true story surrounding Black Hawk Down, and it is said that machine guns are frequently used by drivers to negotiate through car traffic. It is a land without law, a soulless place at the edge of Africa. Much of it bears more resemblance to the last level in an especially difficult video game than to life on Earth. It is more modern warfare than modern world.
Oddly enough, several supermodels were born in Mogadishu including Iman and Yasmin Warsame - a footnote of beauty for an ugly place. Flights to Mog can be booked on Jubba Airways from Jeddah and Dubai. Good luck with that. Seriously though, if you decide to go, be sure to wear a bulletproof vest and hire a small army of Ethiopian soldiers.
Filed under: Arts and Culture, Learning, Photos, Africa, Asia, North America, Oceania, South America, Liberia, Somalia, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, Yemen, Haiti, Mexico, United States, Papua New Guinea, Brazil, Airlines, Budget Travel, News, Travel Health, Middle East, Democratic Republic of Congo (Zaire), Travel Security

















Reader Comments (Page 7 of 7)
Ana Fellows Jan 9th 2012 4:50AM
Tõ com o Joel e não abro...
And the worst is treat humanitary issues as "touristic" matters...are you crazy?
Aren´t you ashamed of just taking pictures instead of doing something?
Would you like to have a truck full of people taking pictures of your life ?
And please dear americans...a movie - City of God is not a reality show ....
Dear Beavis: most of Rocinha´s inhabitants are white ...coming from Northeast Brazil... and by the way...there is water and light...supermarkets , banks....
David Stevenson Jan 8th 2012 4:21PM
This is a most offensively insensitive article attempting crassly and incredibly stupidly to make light of human suffering. Very disappointed in the Huffington post.
gringoinrio Jan 8th 2012 4:32PM
Ohhh...give me a break!! Rocinha in this list of dead-end dumps?
I'm a blonde haired, blued eyed Australian...it doesn't come any more "gringo" than me and I'm regularly in, around or passing through Rocinha.
You're so far off the mark even placing Rio anywhere near this list of shitholes...and this nonesense about needing a guide to enter a favela is a unfair generalization.
The 1st Friday of every month i go to a jazz club in a favela, my friend, also a gringo, runs a restaurant in another. There are hostels and boutique hotels springing up all around the favelas of Rio's South Zone.
Come on...get it right FFS!
cleber Jan 8th 2012 5:20PM
I come here as a resident of Rocinha in my opinion is unfortunate lack of information and compentencia some people who post information without making the slightest Surveys on the community. communicate to the ignorant and incompetent that here in Rocinha and a safer area of the river so that the agency bacarias diponibilizamos of 3, bobi's, McDonald's, a tourism company and various consumer electronics company famous. Residents are also among tourist who visit vinherao and decide to live here (American, Italian, French and others)
sorry, no more guess I usufluiu you the wonders that Rocinha has to offer or maybe you have caught this photo on the internet and made this comment totally senseless and bigoted.
Here is a DICARE come to the river to visit farm.
You're a terrible columnist do a recycling that the recycling something to you.
alexandre cleber
River - Rocinha
cleber Jan 8th 2012 5:22PM
venho aqui como morador da rocinha da minha opiniao é lamentavel a falta de informaçao e compentencia de algumas pessoas que publicam informaçoes sem fazer a menor pequisa sobre a comunidade. comunico ao ignorante e incompetente que aqui na rocinha e uma da area mais seguras do rio tanto que nos diponibilizamos de 3 agencia bacarias, bobi´s, mcdonald´s, empresa de turismo e varias empresas de eletroeletronicos famosas. entre os moradores tambem estao turista que vinherao visitar e decidirao morar aqui ( americanos, italiano, franceses e entre outros)
sinto muito, mais axo que vc nao usufluiu das maravilhas que a rocinha tem a oferecer ou talves vc tenha pegado esse foto na internet e feito esse comentario totalmente sem nexo e preconceituoso.
fica aqui uma dicar ao vir no rio visite a rocinha.
voce e um pessimo colunista faça uma reciclagem se que da pra reciclar algo de voce.
cleber alexandre
rio - rocinha
Viktor Bengtsson Jan 9th 2012 3:10AM
Wow... just, wow. This article should be deleted and replaced with an apology for incredible uninformed journalism. The author and editor should be fired with all due haste. As a final measure the blog should be encased in lead and sunk in international waters.
American in Rio Jan 9th 2012 6:49AM
I am an American ex-pat and have lived in Rio de Janeiro for just over 10 years now. Prior to moving to Rio, I lived in several major metropolitan areas and visited numerous others, as well as several foreign countries. My background is in law enforcement and security, so I have a unique perspective on the "dangers" of different cities. It's obvious from THIS post, that the author has not visited any of these locations. What's truly sad is that the Huffington Post gave this author a platform to slander one of the most stunningly gorgeous and amazingly hospitable cities in the world using information and some stock photo that they probably pulled from the internet. (Note that MOST of the photos in the article are taken from Flicker accounts). This is what modern journalism has come to? Sad.
Eric Jan 9th 2012 11:20AM
You forgot Las Vegas...
armando Jan 13th 2012 2:08PM
Rocinha is the best place in the world..u don't know..
I live in Rocinha by 20 years...
I LOVE ROCINHA..
Rex Welin Jan 13th 2012 9:56PM
This report and ranking is all crab by someone with ulterior motives. It’s economical assassination of a nation’s tourism industry. Port Moresby is one of the places on earth with friendly people, terror threat free and is the largest pacific island nation in the pacific. As we say in PNG, come and see for yourself than believing some craps. Port Moresby has direct flights via Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Manila, Brisbane, Cairns and the Pacific Islands. To have read that access is only through Australia is utter nonsense.
welly Jan 17th 2012 2:30AM
this article was written by a lunatic who goes into a city and finds some shacks, takes a picture and parade to the world that that represents the whole city! If that criteria is applied, even the USA would be on the list, infact, every country under the earth. The human brain is just dirty!
Tsss Jan 19th 2012 12:27PM
What the purpose of this article? To show that there are bad places to visit and better not go there and to have a 'real' opinion about them and better understand the reason why the countries are like this, the places and the people there? Looking at facts, there are more armed robberies in NYC or London than in Kinshasa. As of today more than 14 people have been killed by knife attacks alone in London. Photography in DRC is legal since 2010 (timely for the 50 years anniversary celebrations) to promote tourism. What happened to journalism who aims to educate?
Erik Jan 23rd 2012 2:33PM
What a shitty survey or ranking, just doesnt make any significant sense at all! Safety on a personal level when moving around in any of the chosen cities is hardly determined from any of the criteria looked upon!
Wilfrid St Urbain Jan 25th 2012 7:52AM
I have been to Rio three time and i have visited some Favelas. The people living there are as poor you can be; but I've never observed any sign of violence or crime
anonymous Jan 28th 2012 7:18PM
Wow I thought Michigan had the highest unemployment rate in the world. Guess there are places that are worse.
http://www.squidoo.com/commonly-asked-interview-questions-and-behavioural-interviews
HectorAlex Feb 27th 2012 4:06PM
I beg to differ about the opinion in Juarez. True, it is a a city caught in a drug battle... but it is not a nasty city... the cartels are causing a destabilization of the economy, but it only reflects of the the business and jobs. Other than that, if you are not involved with the cartels, they will leave you alone.
Gary Feb 27th 2012 9:26PM
I am an American who lived in Rocinha for over one year. I cannot believe the author included this community on the list. Absolutely absurd. Obviously, the author has never been to the community because you would have to know the residents to recognize its true beauty. It's a wonderful place and if you think it is a 'playground for modern day Lil Ze's', take a stroll through Copacabana and then Rocinha and see where you get robbed first.
Dylan Feb 15th 2013 9:20AM
Mogadishu also has the Somali Symphony. Common instruments being M4s and Galils