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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Egypt sees tourism rebound ahead of vote

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Maram Mazen -


Egypt is seeing a promising rebound in tourism following devastating terror attacks, in welcome news to the government of President Abdel Fattah al Sisi as he seeks re-election this month. In the eastern Red Sea city of Hurghada, tourists lounge on sunbeds on the beach or play volleyball as boats carrying divers pass by. Among them is Bent Skovboe from Denmark, a 77-year-old who says he has visited Egypt more than 75 times.


“If there was only Red Sea for snorkelling, I will come, but they also have pyramids in Cairo, temples in Luxor, the Nile and Aswan, and the people are very friendly,” says Skovboe, decked in a swimsuit with a cold drink in hand.


Already in decline after the toppling of longtime ruler Hosni Mubarak in 2011, Egypt’s tourism industry was dealt a devastating blow in 2015 when terrorists bombed a Russian airliner carrying holidaymakers from the Red Sea resort of Sharm el Sheikh, killing all 224 on board.


The IS group, which has killed hundreds of policemen and soldiers in an insurgency based mainly in North Sinai, claimed responsibility for the airline attack.


Sisi, who is running virtually unopposed in the March 26-28 election, has pledged to wipe out the extremists, saying such attacks pose an existential threat to the state.


Talking about attacks on tourism earlier this year, Sisi said: “When I say the goal is to bring down the state, you have to know how that is done. When a certain sector is targeted, he (an attacker) knows what he’s doing.” IS, now encircled in its Sinai strongholds, has pledged to redouble efforts to attack tourists and the industry is a barometer of the stability Sisi has promised to restore. The year after the attack on the Russian airliner was “one of the worst years for tourism,” says Hisham el Demery, the chairman of the Egyptian Tourism Promotion Board.


That year, Egypt received 5.4 million tourists, down from 14.7 million in 2010.


Tourism revenue, a primary source of foreign income, fell to $3.8 billion in the fiscal year ending June 2016, down from $11.6 billion in the year ending June 2010, according to the central bank.


Last year, the number of visitors was up to 8.3 million people, according to official figures. Travel agencies, hotel managers, and diving centres said that reservations are rising, especially in Red Sea destinations such as Hurghada and Marsa Alam.


Mohamed Aboustate, general manager of Mahmya, one of Hurghada’s top attractions, said this rebound took place mainly after “tourism companies and hotels made a big effort...spending a lot on compelling advertising campaigns.”


Mahmya is a 10,000-square-metre day-resort project on Giftun island. Visitors take a boat to the island, spend the day on its beach, snorkel along its coast or scuba dive, and head back to mainland Hurghada by night. Increasing stability has been a factor in the rebound, says Marc Zafra, head of destination management at LuxairTours, the tour operator of Luxembourg’s national carrier.


As demand rises, LuxairTours plans to double flights to Hurghada — currently one per week — by the end of March, while they already “have an increase of 250 per cent compared to last year” in bookings, says Zafra. More than 70 per cent of Egypt’s tourists arrive on charter flights, run by operators such as LuxairTours, according to Demery. “Tourism’s revival will probably continue as long as there are no large-scale terrorist incidents,” says Mostafa Kamel al Sayed, of Cairo University. Sisi, a former army chief elected in 2014 a year after ousting his predecessor following mass protests, has not stressed this revival in his election campaign. But he often suggests his government’s counter-terrorism strategy is making headway in restoring stability.


The rebound, however, has yet to reach Sharm el Sheikh and the wider South Sinai region as authorities battle IS in North Sinai. “The destinations that are most (negatively) affected are Sharm el Sheikh city, or South Sinai, and this is of course a result of the absence of two very important markets which represent more than 50 to 60 per cent of the business mix, which is the English and Russian markets,” says Demery.— AFP


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