New
atmosphere under reformist president sees visa rules eased with Chinese
visitors a priority for sanctions-hit country
The Guardian, Saeed Kamali Dehghan, Friday 18 October 2013
Iranian
girls take a break from skiing at Shemshak, near Tehran. Shemshak
is one of 18
winter sports resorts in Iran. Photograph: Damir Sagolj/Reuters/Corbis
|
With its
ancient ruins, glittering mosques and spectacular landscapes, Iran is home to
some of the world's cultural treasures, but ever since the 1979 revolution,
these have largely remained unseen by international tourists. In recent years,
the country's most high-profile visitors have been nuclear inspectors from the
International Atomic Energy Agency.
Now,
however, the new administration of Hassan Rouhani is taking steps to open up
Iran to foreigners in an effort to improve its international image after the
gloomy years under Mahmoud Ahmadinejad – and to bring in much-needed foreign
currency to an economy reeling from years of sanctions.
Mohammad-Ali
Najafi, a vice-president and the head of the country's cultural heritage and
tourism organisation, said Iran was overhauling its strict immigration rules to
ease or abolish visa requirements for most foreign visitors.
"From
the next two or three months, I predict that the number of foreign tourists who
come to visit Iran as a tourist will greatly increase," said Najafi in a
telephone interview from Tehran.
Najafi
admitted some senior officials had been concerned at the prospect of allowing
large numbers of tourists – especially westerners – in without prior security
checks, but said that since Rouhani took office in August Iran's tourism body
had eventually secured their support – and government approval.
The
authorities will divide countries into three categories, Najafi said. Tourists
from countries in the first group will not need a visa; visitors from the
second group will be allowed in without a visa as long as they are part of an
organised tour group; and visa procedures for the third group will be eased –
meaning that many will be able to obtain a visa on arrival.
"Western
countries will most probably be categorised in the second or third group,"
he said.
The
semi-official Isna news agency has reported that except for 10 countries,
including Britain, the US, Afghanistan and Pakistan, foreign tourists will be
able to obtain visas upon arrival at the airport.
In
September, Najafi was with Rouhani as the president travelled to New York for
the UN general assembly. That visit marked a huge breakthrough in relations
with the US, with the first direct talks between American and Iranian
presidents since Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution, and renewed hopes that a
solution can be found to the stalemate over Iran's nuclear programme.
The trip
also opened up the possibility of a boost for the country's tourism industry.
"When I was in America, I personally met with a number of tour operators,
mainly those who are operated by Iranians in the US or non-Iranians who have
had experience in dealing with Iran in the past," Najafi said.
After he
was sworn in, Rouhani initially nominated Najafi as education minister but
parliament accused him of previously having sided with the opposition Green
movement and refused to sanction his appointment. Instead, Rouhani made him a
vice-president, a cabinet position that does not require a parliamentary vote.
Iranians
have also seen encouraging signs of the thaw at home: high-profile political
prisoners have been released and the media face fewer restrictions. Najafi said
the new political atmosphere had already encouraged more visitors.
"Over
the past two months, many travel agencies have reported to us that the number
of foreign tourists who have signed up to their Iran tours has increased a
lot," he said. According to Najafi, four million foreign visitors came
last year, mainly pilgrims from neighbouring countries such as Pakistan and
Iraq who went to religious sites such as the Imam Reza shrine in Mashhad, a
revered Shia site. "We don't have exact figures but we estimate that last
year our tourism industry helped add some $2bn [£1.3bn] to our revenue,"
said Najafi. Now, Najafi said, the target was $10bn.
Goodwill
ambassadors
Chinese
tourists are a priority. "World figures show that China sends more tourists
to visit other countries than anywhere else," Najafi said. "With help
from our embassy in China, we have spoken to Chinese tourism officials and we
have invited a number of them to come to Iran."
Najafi
hoped foreign tourists would become "ambassadors for the goodwill of our
country and our people" in the world. "We have a secure and safe
country in our region … but we in Iran should take the first step in persuading
westerners that they should have no fear in coming to Iran."
Unesco has
so far declared16 world heritage sites in Iran, which was historically referred
to as Persia in the west up until the 20th century.
In recent
years, Iran's culture and heritage have fallen victim to the political dispute
between Tehran and the west, which has dominated the global discourse on Iran.
Brandon Stanton, an American citizen who travelled to Iran last year, attracted
attention on returning home by posting an itinerary, along with pictures of
Iran, on the Human of New York photo blog.
"Americans
are especially loved," he wrote with astonishment. "This was noted in
every travel account that I read, and I can confirm the fact. You will be
smiled at, waved at, invited to meals, and asked to deliver personal messages
to Jennifer Lopez. American music, movies, and media are thoroughly consumed by
the people of Iran."
Amos
Chapple, a photographer from New Zealand who has visited Iran on a number of
times, said the Iran he saw was utterly different from the one represented in
the west.
"Every
traveller I met felt the same way: they had arrived expecting hostility and
danger, but ended up amongst the most cosmopolitan and generous people in the
Middle East," he said.
"Having
visited three times it's just heartbreaking to see what damage the sanctions
are doing to ordinary people who have nothing but goodwill towards
America."
Zoe Holman,
an Australian journalist who visited Iran for the first time in 2003, said:
"Despite the divisions between 'the Muslim' and 'the west' being projected
in geopolitics by the 'war on terror' and Iraq war, I was surprised, and
humbled, to discover that none of these prejudices seemed to have trickled down
to affect Iranian attitudes towards westerners.
"I was
struck by the cosmopolitanism of urban Iranians, their education,
open-mindedness and their humorous irreverence for the religious regime which
governed them."
The Foreign
Office currently advises against all but essential travel to most of Iran. Unlike
tourists, journalists – especially those working for the foreign press – are
usually unwelcome in the Islamic republic.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.