Yahoo – AFP,
Katia Dolmadjian, 10 February 2016
Paris (AFP)
- The world's tourism map is being redrawn at lightning speed as holidaymakers
switch preferences prompted by terror attacks, epidemics and migrant crises.
Jihadist
attacks on tourists in Tunisia last year and the October 31 crash of a Russian
plane which took off from its Egyptian Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh have
devastated the tourism sectors in both countries.
An Egyptian
man waits with his camel for
customers near the pyramids in the southern
Cairo
district of Giza on January 19, 2016
(AFP Photo/Khaled Desouki)
|
Overall,
world tourism has never been in better shape. Nearly 1.2 billion people
travelled abroad in 2015, an increase of 4.4 percent over the previous year,
but the casual observer could be fooled by the sight of deserted North African
beaches, once tourist hotspots.
Tunisia,
which built its tourism industry on guaranteed sunshine and rock-bottom prices,
is the most stunning example of the devastating impact of security fears after
murderous attacks targeted foreigners.
Visitor
numbers to Tunisia tumbled by two million in 2015, leaving coast resorts empty,
hotels idle and the economy in tatters.
Tunisia's
tourism sector accounted for almost 10 percent of the nation's economy.
'Muslim
countries are suffering'
Turkey is
another victim of attack fears. Germany's TUI, the world's biggest tourism
group, said Tuesday that it had seen bookings to Turkey drop by 40 percent in
the wake of an Islamic State suicide attack in Istanbul.
Turkish
media, meanwhile, reported that visitor numbers to the top Turkish resort of
Antalya dropped by 17 percent last month, the lowest level for the month of
January in a decade.
Some
destinations are collateral damage from attack fears, as tourists appear to
make little distinction between countries within the Middle East or North
Africa, as Jordan has found to its cost.
"There
was no attack, but we were affected tremendously by a drop of visitors coming
from Europe," Jordan's tourism minister Nayef al-Fayez said recently.
Turkey is
another victim of attack fears, with tourism numbers dropping in
some cases by
40 percent (AFP Photo/Ozan Kose)
|
"All
Muslim countries are suffering to a greater or lesser degree, even those which
have been made totally secure, like Oman," said Jean-Francois Rial,
chairman of French travel operator Voyageurs du Monde.
"The
only exception is Iran, but they've started from scratch," he told AFP,
noting that many European agencies have begun offering travel to Iran since
Western powers have started dismantling sanctions.
"There
is no doubt that the whole Middle East region is today associated with
insecurity in the mind of the Western tourist," said Wouter Geerts,
analyst at the Euromonitor research company.
"We
expect countries such as Greece, Portugal and Spain to largely benefit from the
situation, offering similar weather, competitive prices, and security," he
said.
The sudden
surge in demand is leading to higher prices in these destinations.
"Hotel
owners tell clients 'Instead of charging 50 euros per double room, I'm going to
charge 55, take it or leave it. If you don't want it, others will'," said
Olivier Petit, at the In Extenso firm.
Cuban
bottlenecks
Cuba, which
already got a boost from the thawing of relations with the United States in
late 2014, is now also battling with bottlenecks, with daily arrivals of huge
cruise ships in the Havana bay.
Cuba is now
also battling with bottlenecks of tourists, with daily arrivals of huge
cruise
ships in Havana bay (AFP Photo/Ana Rodriguez)
|
"I
have a group of 250 people arriving this week and I've just heard that I can no
longer count on 80 rooms that were booked and paid for in March, all because of
over-booking," said Stephane Ferrux, director of French specialist travel
agency "Cuba autrement" ("Cuba with a difference").
Tourism
numbers in Cuba rose by 17 percent in 2015, "but the country is not ready,
they don't have the quality to justify prices that have gone up by half in a
year. Everybody wants a piece of the cake," he said.
Haiti's
unspoilt beaches are also becoming a magnet for tourists, six years after the
country was devastated by an earthquake.
Battalions
of tourists have been going to Colombia, Peru, Mexico and Argentina, but Latin
American destinations could soon be affected by the spreading Zika crisis, experts
say, pointing to the impact on sub-Saharan Africa of Ebola, of Chikungunya in
the Carribbean and MERS Coronavirus, or Camel flu, in South Korea.
The migrant
crisis has also taken a heavy toll on Greek islands, once a very safe bet for
operators, but where masses of refugees have landed, scaring tourists.
"The
Greek islands, especially tourism in Kos, have been severely damaged, as
holidaymakers feel uneasy about the situation," according to Euromonitor,
pointing to data saying that there were 178,000 cancellations of Kos bookings
between January and August 2015.
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