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1. Tuvalu: Tiny and remote, it's the world’s least-visited country. With only around 3,700 foreign visitors a year, Tuvalu remains an untouched Pacific atoll paradise where green lagoons, coral reefs and laid-back island life greet the rare traveller. (Image: Canva)
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2. Kiribati: A far-flung archipelago spanning all four hemispheres. Scattered across the vast Pacific, Kiribati sees only a few thousand visitors annually, a place to snorkel pristine reefs, meet traditional island communities, and experience southeast-Asian-Pacific solitude. (Image: Canva)
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3. Marshall Islands: Remote atolls and turquoise seas, far from tourist maps. With visitor numbers among the world’s lowest, the Marshall Islands offer coral atolls, WWII-era shipwreck dives and a quiet esc

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