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Posts Tagged ‘tourism’

Delhi hosts Kazakhstan-India Travel and Tourism Fair

India and Kazakhstan have both been affected by the global recession, but this has not prevented them from striving to keep bilateral business ties alive since January of this year, when the meltdown was at its devastating peak.
The business end of this strategic relationship has covered cooperation in several areas, including energy, civil nuclear activity, [...]

Commonwealth Games an opportunity to present India as a unique tourism destination: Selja

Union Tourism Minister Kumari Selja said on Thursday that the upcoming Commonwealth Games in Delhi provides an opportunity to India to emerge as a unique and hospitable tourism destination.
Addressing the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) summit here, Selja said: “The Commonwealth Games have given an opportunity for showcasing India as a unique and hospitable [...]

Singapore sticks to target of 17 million visitors by 2015

Singapore visitor arrivals are still forecast to reach 17 million by 2015, as the region overcomes an economic slowdown and health scares including the H1N1 pandemic, the Singapore Tourism Board said.
 
Tourism receipts will rise to $30 billion by 2015, a target first announced five years ago, Chief Executive Officer Aw Kah Peng said today when releasing the board’s “Tourism Compass 2020” road map. “We were hit straight away when the downturn started so I would say, yes, those numbers are challenging but we are not abandoning them.”

Crisis not affecting Serbian tourism

Tourism this year in Serbia has not been affected by the world economic crisis. The Economy Ministry stated that Serbia is the only European country that had an increase in tourism this year.

Tourism atrophies in Europe: Clouds over the Mediterranean

The recession clobbers one of Europe’s biggest industries

HOW badly is the recession hurting Europe’s tourism industry during the all-important summer holidays? The outlook is grim, judging by the trend set earlier in the year. After slipping in the second half of 2008, passenger numbers in Italian airports fell by 13.4% in the first quarter of this year. Spain recorded a similar fall between January and June, with airports on Lanzarote (down 19.1%) and Tenerife (down 17.8%), two popular holiday islands, losing more than most. The French Riviera is suffering, too: Nice airport reported a drop of 8% in passengers during the first half of the year. Firms have slashed travel budgets, families are spending less on leisure and Europe’s airports are feeling the pain.

For hotels as well, the recession is biting in France, Spain and Italy, Europe’s biggest holiday destinations. During the first five months of the year, the number of overnight stays by foreign visitors in French hotels fell by 15.5%. The number of foreigners who visited Spain in the first six months was 11.4% lower than in 2008. The situation is equally grim in Italy, where overnight stays by foreign guests were 11.5% lower in the first half of the year. Bernabo Bocca, chairman of the Italian hoteliers’ association, described the results as a debacle. …

Panama Tourism

Panama tourism is as important to the country as it is to the world that wants to explore this tropical paradise. Panama has so much to offer its visitors that one vacation isn’t enough to see it all. So it isn’t surprising that visitors return over and again to see its beaches, rainforests and much [...]

Arnold Schwarzenegger David Beckham California Tourism Ad

David Beckham is set to team up with California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger for a television ad promoting tourism in the cash-strapped state.

In the commercial, the soccer icon will reportedly be seen playing the sport on a Los Angeles beach.
The Sun reports: “It will be a massive campaign. It shows the governor believes David is [...]

Spain’s tourism sector shaken by militant attack

Spain’s tourism sector, already battered by the economic crisis, now fears last week’s deadly bomb attack on the island of Majorca could scare off more holidaymakers at the height of the season. Majorca, which attracts millions of foreign tourists every year to its beaches and discos, was in

Sun and stability

Byblos bay - June 2009

Lebanon has for decades been so unstable that most people prefer not to plan at all and even short-term government planning is rare. But, as Natalia Antelava reports, the country is experiencing an unprecedented tourism boom based in part on its new-found stability and calm.

Elie Marouni, Lebanon’s tourism minister, is a man with a plan. He has recently launched a 10 year programme he calls "a vision" for the tourism industry in Lebanon.

He insists he has reason to be optimistic.

His ministry estimates that two million tourists, which amounts to half of the country’s actual population, are expected to visit Lebanon before the end of this summer.

"The numbers have doubled, and I am not surprised. Lebanon has it all: the environment, weather, nature, nightlife, ruins and history – and we are still the cheapest country to visit in the Middle East," says Mr. Marouni.

"the minute there is some sort of political stability, we all come back to enjoy our country while we can."

Jasmine Khoury, tourist

Many Lebanese like to describe their country as the place where one can ski in the morning and swim in the Mediterranean in the evening.

It’s not just the beaches, mountains, culture and food that make Lebanon a unique tourist destination.

In this largely conservative region, Lebanon is a place where the glitzy nightlife is a thing of national pride, where alcohol flows freely, and where less is more as far as bikini fashion is concerned.

These laid back beachwear rules apply to the resorts across the country, including the south where the radical Shia group Hezbollah is in control.

Full resorts

But this summer’s unprecedented influx of tourists has little to do with the country’s natural beauty or the relaxed attitudes of its residents.

The reason for the tourism boom is rather unnatural for Lebanon – political stability.

Mr Marouni admits that it’s because of the relative political calm that hundreds of thousands of visitors have descended on Lebanon, paralysing the traffic, filling the seaside resorts and bringing the much needed cash to the economy.

By the pooll in Beirut - Natalia Antelava

The richest among the tourists come from the neighbouring countries of the Arab Gulf, while most visitors from Europe and North America seem to be the members of Lebanon’s 12 million strong diaspora.

Jasmine Khoury, 32, fled the Lebanese civil war in the 1980s and grew up in the UK. She says political stability for Lebanon is what sun is for London.

"In London, the second that the sun comes out people begin to pour out. Here, the minute there is some sort of political stability, we all come back to enjoy our country while we can.

"After all Lebanon’s stability is as reliable as the English weather," Jasmine adds with a smile.

Funding shortage

The same day that Elie Marouni spoke to me about his 10 year plan to build more hotels, remove army checkpoints on the roads that lead to tourist sites and renovate the battered ski lifts, the Lebanese army arrested 10 men on charges of plotting terrorist attacks against United Nations workers in the South. The army said the men were part of a larger network lined to al-Qaeda.

"It shows that we are fighting to stop terrorist in Lebanon and to make sure that only the army has the weapons," Mr Marouni insists.

"Lebanese companies are extremely tenacious. They all have very good contingency plans, they are all able to function under extremely challenging circumstances"

Stephen Orr
UN-sponsored Lebanon Business Linkages Initiative

But he admits that the Lebanese government does not have a full control over what goes on in the country, and that security is a real issue that turns many potential visitors away.

There are major financial issues too. Mr Marouni’s says he needs around US $100m a year to implement his plan, but at the moment he only has around US $8m a year at his disposal.

The Ministry, housed in a run down building in Beirut’s Harma district, cannot afford to place advertisements on major international TV networks.

"Good marketing and improving Lebanon’s image could play a huge role in attracting tourists," says Stephen Orr, the general director of the US government sponsored project, which tries to link private businesses to the global markets.

He works with dozens of companies in the tourism industry that have mushroomed here over the years.

Tenacious

The tourism boom shows that while the government drags itself through endless political crises and stalemates, Lebanon’s famously creative entrepreneurs are grabbing every chance to develop and grow.

"I am very impressed with Lebanon’s private sector. Lebanese companies are extremely tenacious. They all have very good contingency plans, they are all able to function under extremely challenging circumstances," says Stephen Orr.

The level of the development of the private sector, and Lebanon’s natural beauty, is the reason Mr Orr believes the country could easily rival Turkey and Greece as a Mediterranean tourist destination.

But he says the country needs at least five years of stability to get to that level. And few in Lebanon believe that stability can last that long.

Back in his office, even Mr Marouni admits that there is an element of wishful thinking in his 10 year plan.

"In this country something might happen any minute, and any minute we could be thrown 10 years back in time," he says.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Baltimore, New Orleans, San Francisco Lead in Twitter Tourism

A report from DCI found the top five cities using Twitter to draw visitors to their convention and tourism centers are Baltimore, New Orleans, San Francisco, Tampa Bay and Fort Lauderdale.

Destination marketing firm
Development Counsellors International (DCI), which specializes in tourism and
economic development marketing, announced the results of a report on how
destination organizations are leveraging social networking site Twitter to draw
interest and visitors …


Baltimore, New Orleans, San Francisco Lead in Twitter Tourism

A report from DCI found the top five cities using Twitter to draw visitors to their convention and tourism centers are Baltimore, New Orleans, San Francisco, Tampa Bay and Fort Lauderdale.
– Destination marketing firm Development Counsellors International, which
specializes in tourism and economic development marketing, announced the
results of a report on how destination organizations are leveraging social
networking site Twitter to draw interest and visitors to their cities. Baltim…


‘Harry Potter’ filming makes British cathedral tourism hotspot

Keepers of Gloucester Cathedral in England have expressed their joy at the filming of Harry Potter in their ancient building, as it has helped restore public interest in it.
The establishment received almost 10,000 pounds per day from Warner Bros. Studios to use it as the backdrop for the Hogwarts School in scenes for ‘Harry Potter [...]

‘Are we here for your amusement?’

Our increasing demand for adventure is pushing back the frontiers of tourism, but is it also posing a threat to tribal people? John Vidal investigates

When the Jarawa tribe of hunter-gatherers began to emerge in ones and twos from the dense rainforests of the Andaman islands in 1997, it seemed that these mysterious, handsome people only wanted to take a brief look at the modern world and would soon return to the trees.

But in the months that followed, shy Jarawa youths slowly gained in confidence and could be found hanging out on the side of a road recently built through their land. Then they started to stop cars and buses going by, and to beg for food. They even began to board ferries to travel between the islands.

No one knows why these people – one of the original tribes of the Andaman and Nicobar islands, a remote archipelago in the Indian Ocean – decided to leave the forest at that time. Twelve years on they have become a tourist attraction. Local companies take people to gawp at and photograph them as if they are animals in a zoo. Some throw sweets and biscuits to them, or offer them lifts and money.

The majority of the Jarawa, thought to number about 250 people, remain deep in the forests, but some have learned bits of Hindi and regularly visit the port, the hospital or market place, says Sophie Grig, a researcher at human rights organisation Survival International who has visited the Andamans several times. One or two Jarawa children have reportedly gone to a school and asked for education.

Integration has been partial and more or less at the Jarawa’s own pace and volition. But now comes a threat that some anthropologists say could lead to the extinction of a tribe that has lived in isolation for millennia.

Barefoot India, a major Indian travel company, has just won a high court case that will allow it to build an eco-resort at Collipur, close to the designated Jarawa reserve. Other hotels are expected to follow.

Barefoot, which already has an Andamans resort on Havelock Island, plans to bring in thousands of tourists a year from Europe to scuba dive and to explore the remote islands now becoming popular as one of Asia’s least visited beach destinations.

But Survival fears that the increased contact with tourists will inevitably expose the tribe fully to diseases and cultures that they will never be able to cope with. “Evidence from around the world is that isolated tribal peoples have little or no immunity against diseases like flu and measles, and it is certain that the more contact there is between the tribe and tourists that diseases will devastate them,” says Grig. “It’s not unusual for 50% or more of a population to die soon after contact. One epidemic can lead to severe depression, alcohol abuse, dependency and even suicide.

“It’s incredibly dangerous. Why does Barefoot have to go there? There are plenty of other places.”

Grig continues: “The biggest concern is disease. The Jarawa are incredibly vulnerable. Then there’s alcohol. People in this situation are vulnerable to addiction and dependency.”

A spokesman for Barefoot says: “Barefoot would not countenance any exploitation of Jarawa for tourism purposes from any of its guests, and most certainly will not attempt to do so itself. The Jarawa have no access to the resort’s land, which is more than three kilometres away. [Far from threatening the tribe] Barefoot has had an extremely positive impact on the tribal interplay with the villagers in this area.”

There are perhaps 100 indigenous communities around the world that have chosen to live in complete isolation, but the frontiers of tourism are being pushed ever forward by cheap flights and an appetite for extreme ethno-tourism fuelled by the natural instinct of man to be curious about other people – and by shows such as Bruce Parry’s documentary series Tribe.

The Jarawa are peculiarly at risk because they live so close to a holiday resort, but dozens of other extremely remote groups are also in danger. In the West Papua province of Indonesia, US expatriate Kelly Woolford of Papua Adventures offers – for $7,000-$10,000 – to take tourists and camera crews deep into the forests of the Mamberamo and Baliem valleys, where he says they are quite likely to meet “stone age” tribes.

Papua Adventures does not guarantee “encounters”, but its “first contact” trek is advertised as a “full-on exploration” in areas where previously contact-free tribes are known to live.

Groups regularly stumble across tribespeople who appear to threaten them with bows and arrows, but who then disappear. Anthropologists and others who have seen photographs have accused Woolford of setting up these encounters, but he insists that the meetings are all by chance.

“Tourism can be a useful source of income, but most people would say it’s pretty bad news for the local people,” says anthropologist David Turton.

Turton has spent 40 years among the semi-nomadic Mursi in the Omo valley in southern Ethiopia, where some women have had their lower lip pierced and stretched so that a clay plate can be inserted. With the prospect of a giant dam flooding much of their lands, the tribe has enough problems, but it has been exploited by tourism now for 20 years.

Tour companies have presented the Mursi as the most primitive and wild people and the Mursi are fully aware they are being singled out as savages. The tourists arrive in four-wheel drive vehicles and the Mursi gather around them, asking for money in return for being photographed.

Turton has asked the Mursi what they think of these people, who only seem to want their photographs. He recorded this conversation in 1991:

Bio-iton-giga: “Why do they do it? Do they want us to become their children, or what? What do they want the photographs for?”

Turton: “They come because they see you as different and strange people. They go back home and tell their friends that they’ve been on a long trip, to Mursiland. They say, ‘Look, here are the people we saw.’ They do it for entertainment.”

Komor-a-kora: “We said to each other, ‘Are we here just for their amusement?’ ”

“They conclude that white people are thieves. The relationship is similar to prostitution,” says Turton. “The Mursi know they are looked down on. But to them the encounter is a commercial transaction. They are short of everything and cash is important.”

Tourism has always been culturally destructive and exploitative. Hundreds of people once lived in hardship but security on St Kilda, 60 miles off the west coast of mainland Scotland, but the community collapsed after first missionaries and then tourist boats arrived in the 1920s. Within a few years of the first tourists, the community had disintegrated and those remaining on the island had to be evacuated.

Equally, the Himba in Namibia survived everything that a hostile arid environment could throw at them for centuries until they became a tourist attraction in the 1970s. Their communities were overrun and many Himba are now beggars and alcoholics.

These days, tribes are regularly diminished in the name of economic advancement. The refugee Burmese Kayan women in Thailand, who wear brass coils round their necks, each year attract thousands of tourists, who pay to visit them in their camps. Their communities are disintegrating as alcoholic dependency grows.

Governments also act inhumanely to encourage tourism. The Botswana government is putting out to tender for safari companies to build lodges with bore holes in the central Kalahari game reserve at the same time that the Bushmen – who have lived there for millennia – are forbidden to even use the existing ones. One safari lodge will have a water hole less than a mile from the Bushmen, who will be made to walk hundreds of miles to collect water.

The worst destruction of indigenous groups is often invisible, done by governments and the tourism industry exploiting tribal groups for their land. “Indigenous peoples are often removed from their ancestral lands to make way for tourist developments or to create national parks where animals take precedence over people,” says Tricia Barnett, director of Tourism Concern.

The watchdog group is to publish a major report on the human rights abuses of tourism in September. “Tourism is violating left, right and centre all manner of the articles contained in the UN human rights declaration – land rights, dignity, respect, the right to privacy, cultural exploitation,” says Barnett.

But above all, land everywhere is being claimed at the expense of indigenous people for the construction of hotels and golf courses, and for the creation of national parks and reserves.

“The onward march of tourism involves the arbitrary removal of people from their lands,” says Barnett. “Tourists are becoming often unwitting collaborators in the exploitation of others. It is a competitive, resource-hungry industry, by its nature exploitative. International hotel chains and operators jostle to expand and out-price each other, and impoverished governments compete to attract business by offering cheap land and tax free investment. Indigenous groups are often the most vulnerable.”

“Tourism is land hungry. It depends on unspoilt landscapes. Time and again the indigenous peoples have their land grabbed. They just don’t come into the equation,” says Rachel Noble of Tourism Concern.

But it is possible to get ethno-tourism right in an ethically sensitive way. Jonny Bealby, who runs Wild Frontiers, which has been taking small groups of people to stay days at a time in remote places such as the Hindu Kush in Pakistan, says many eco-tourism businesses are starting up.

“These are joint ventures with indigenous communities, like the Achuar [on the Peru/Ecuador border]. In the western Amazon, there are several eco-lodges where usually an agency sets up a partnership with a tribe. The company and the tribe each have a 50% stake. On the whole, they seem to be perfectly respectful of each other. The communities do it on their own terms. The ventures are on a manageable scale. It’s fundamentally a meeting of equals. It comes down to scale and who is in control,” says Bealby. “If [ethno-tourism] is done right it can benefit everyone.”

Successful ventures, such as with the Akha hill tribe in Thailand, Aboriginal cultural tours in Australia, the Garifuna tourism group in Honduras and the Il Ngwesi Lodge in Kenya, which is 100% owned by local Maasai, are invariably grassroots-led and community-based.

“Tribal groups often feel that some tourists exploit them. It happens when they are being observed as if in a goldfish bowl. They do not like it when tourists stay in a swanky hotel and drive in and do not talk to them, then get in their Jeeps and go back,” says Bealby

“That kind of thing happens a lot. But when it’s small groups and the money goes direct to local people, then the benefits flow both ways.”

• For more information on the Jarawa go to survival-international.org/jarawa.

In it together
Leading lights of ethno-tourism

Il Ngwesi Lodge Kenya
Perched on the edge of the Mukogodo escarpment, this is an award-winning, upmarket eco-ranch with timber floors flowing around tree trunks and an infinity pool. Guests can shower outside overlooking a waterhole, go on game drives, camel safaris and guided bush walks. The lodge is owned and run by the Il Ngwesi (which means “people of the wildlife”) Maasai tribe of Laikipiak, who have lived on this land for centuries.

• ilngwesi.com.

El Descanso Costa Rica
El Descanso, in the Río Grande de Térraba river basin, is run by the Asodint indigenous organisation. Traditionally-designed cabins are set in tranquil surroundings and traditional food is on offer. Guests can visit ancient petroglyphs, the Catarata and Térraba rivers and other indigenous communities, learn about medicinal plants, play traditional games and buy local handicrafts. Profits are reinvested into the community.

• nacientespalmichal.com and actuarcostarica.com.

Garifuna Tourism Group Honduras
Located along the peaceful, undeveloped white sandy beaches on the north coast of Honduras on the Caribbean, the Garifuna communities offer grass roots tourism based on cultural exchange and interaction. Guests share in the vibrant local dance, food and music cultures, and learn about Garifuna’s traditional fishing culture. The central tourism group ensures that communities are never over-saturated with tourists, so visitors feel like invited guests. The enterprise is owned by the Garifuna people.

• 00504 9277513 and +4480121, geo.ya.com/ENKEL.

Akha Hill Tribe, Chiang Rai Thailand
In mountainous northern Thailand, visitors stay in bamboo or mud bungalows overlooking a valley surrounded by tea plantations, rice fields, waterfalls and jungle. There is an open-air restaurant, a herbal sauna, and jungle treks with expert guides, including fishing, elephant rides, an overnight stay in a banana leaf house, and visits to other hill tribes. All profits go to the Akha Hill Tribe community and its education system.

• 0066 0899975505, akhahill.com.

Aboriginal Cultural Tours Australia
Aboriginal Cultural Tours take you to rarely seen areas of Adjahdura Land on the Yorke Peninsula of South Australia, walking with descendants of the original owners of the land, living with, talking with, and experiencing first-hand their rich culture. Guests visit Aboriginal communities, explore ancient cultural landscapes and mythological land formations and experience cultural ceremonies. Aboriginal Cultural Tours is owned and operated by indigenous people.

• diversetravel.com.au and aboriginalaustraliatravel.com.

These projects are all listed in Tourism Concern’s Ethical Travel Guide, available to buy at tourismconcern.org.uk, 020-7133 3800.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Rwanda beekeeper ‘sparked fire’

Silverback gorilla in Rwanda, file image

Emergency crews in Rwanda have contained wildfires that they say were set off by a beekeeper collecting honey by smoking out bees from a hive.

The fires burnt for days, consuming 1.5 sq km of land in the Volcanoes National Park, home to rare gorillas.

Rwanda’s tourism chief Rosette Rugamba said 4,000 people had taken part in the emergency response – including local officials and government ministers.

She said the fires were under control but not completely extinguished.

"We are being cautious and saying it is contained," she told a news conference. But she said wind tended to spark further fires.

"From what we have been seeing, in the morning and in the evening, you see the smoke."

The BBC’s Geoffrey Mutagoma, in the capital Kigali, says the national park accounts for 90% of all tourism revenues to Rwanda.

He says the Rwandan government is spending $30,000 (£18,200) a day to maintain the disaster team on location – but there have been similar outbreaks of fire in other parts of the country over the weekend.

Mrs Rugamba said the fire was sparked accidentally by a local beekeeper extracting honey from a hive.

"He tried to put it out by himself but he failed. He is the one who broke the news about the fire," she said.

Tourism officials have now issued a stern warning to people to avoid lighting fires near national parks.

Earlier reports said groups of gorillas had been seen fleeing the flames, heading to neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Berlin train chaos threatens tourism, athletics

Berlin’s regional train network, plunged into chaos in recent weeks by safety problems, may not return to normal until December, an official said, threatening misery for commuters, tourists and visitors to the World Athletics Championships in August. Since a cracked wheel caused a derailment on

Life’s no beach

By Steve Kingstone
BBC News, Tenerife, Canary Islands

Usually during summer, the main beach at Playa de las Americas in Tenerife would be packed with holidaymakers. But today, there is no scramble for sun beds, no scrap for a patch of sand. Aside from a few families, the place is deserted.

"Things are very slow," admits Anthony Foxall, a British expat who runs a water sports business from a beachside kiosk.

"This time last year, these sun beds would have been full, and we would have had jet-ski customers on the water until evening.

"But like everyone, we’re struggling."

Above the beach, the boardwalk is lined with pubs, bars and restaurants, many offering special deals. But the empty tables tell the story – here too, business is painfully slow.

"There are fewer British tourists coming, and those that do come are spending less," says Mohammed Ouatiq, a waiter at a restaurant offering Spanish and international cuisine.

"Before, it was easy. But this month, we have had to drop our prices."

Chain reaction

With around nine million holidaymakers a year, tourism and related services account for a dizzying 75% of the Canary Islands’ gross domestic product (GDP).

"The mood is really low… People try their best to avoid talking about it."

Louise Cook
Laid-off restaurant worker

Louise Cook

When visitor numbers fall – as they did by 14.5% during the first five months of 2009 compared with last year – almost everyone suffers.

"This is a year-round tourism economy," says Alberto Bernabe of the Tenerife Tourism Corporation. "So if tourists don’t come, it affects our restaurants, shops, hotels, transport – everything. It’s a chain reaction."

The fall in numbers has been sharpest among British holidaymakers, who make up a third of all arrivals.

Some have been deterred by the ongoing weakness of the sterling against the euro, while others saw holiday plans wrecked by the collapse of tour operators such as XL and LTE.

"We’ve lost four tour operators and airlines in the past year," says Mr Bernabe. "Air capacity to the island is down by 10%, and unfortunately we can’t reinvent airlines overnight."

Human cost

Every lost seat on an incoming flight costs the Canarian economy 500 euros (£430) – the amount spent here by the average holidaymaker.

All told, the industry forecasts revenue losses during 2009 of 1.5bn euros (£1.3bn).

Inevitably, there is a human price. Unemployment has soared to 24%, almost double the figure of a year ago. Almost a quarter of a million people are out of work.

"The path forward is quality"

Alberto Bernabe
Tenerife Tourism Corporation

"We’re talking about a hundred people going for one job – and that can just be in a bar or a restaurant," says Louise Cook, who has been seeking work ever since she was laid off from a restaurant which was later forced to close.

"The mood is really low," she adds. "People try their best to avoid talking about it."

Among politicians, there is a recognition that the islands’ troubles are not self-inflicted, but rather the inevitable consequence of a global recession.

Public investment totalling 120m euros (£100m) over four years will ease the pain – as roads, squares, gardens and beaches are given a facelift.

In the private sector, 20 hotels in Tenerife have decided against struggling on through a loss-making summer, instead opting to close temporarily and carry out long-overdue renovations.

New look

They include Coral Beach in Playa de las Americas, where workmen are installing a new pool, a fitness centre, and upgraded guest apartments in a style marketed as "Nordic concept."

Construction at Coral Beach

The new complex will boast four stars, one more than before.

"We decided this was the right time to do it," explains Manuel Rodriguez, the sales manager.

"We’re in a global economic crisis, bookings were down, and we believe we’ll get better business from Scandinavian tourists when the improved facilities open in winter."

For many hotels this will be the first serious upgrade in decades, according to Ricardo Fernandez of Ashotel, a local industry body.

"Some installations have had 30 years of intensive use, so it’s a good moment to improve them, " he says. "We’re also adding value – by emphasising local gastronomy, family facilities and excursions."

With fewer holidaymakers arriving, the strategy is to encourage those that do come to spend more.

Wealthy Russian clients, who have discovered the islands’ growing number of five-star hotels, are seen as a prototype for the future.

"Tenerife has just over five million tourists a year, but we would rather have four million, spending 30-40% more," says Mr Bernabe of the tourism corporation. "The path forward is quality."

Fighting talk, from an industry under fire. But however bold the aspirations, every business here knows the immediate priority is survival.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

UK sees first fall in tourists for seven years

Number of visits from overseas drops 2.7% to 31.9m, as Britain’s tourism spending deficit widens to a record £20.5bn

The number of overseas visitors travelling to the UK on holiday or on business has fallen for the first time in seven years – although in a boost for the tourism industry, they are spending at record levels.

British tourists also made fewer visits abroad last year, confirming the trend of “staycationing”, or holidaying at home, as a result of the credit crunch. Britons venturing overseas in the recession are choosing to visit the perennial favourites Spain and France, followed by the US, the Irish Republic and Italy.

The figures for 2008, published today in the annual Travel Trends report from the Office for National Statistics, showed there were 31.9m foreign visits to Britain last year, a 2.7% fall on the previous year.

This was the first drop since 2001, when a combination of the outbreak of foot and mouth disease and the September 11 attacks in the US led to a dramatic slump.

The figures are compiled from the ongoing international passenger survey, involving interviews with more than 250,000 people a year travelling to and from the UK via major airports, ports and tunnel routes.

Tourism chiefs blamed the global economic crisis, which started to bite in earnest in the autumn, as a factor for the fall. The decline was most severe in the last quarter of 2008, when visits fell by 13%.

Overseas visitors spent a record £16.3bn in Britain in 2008. UK residents made 69m visits abroad, down 0.6% on 2007, with the downturn most marked in the last quarter, when the figure fell by 9%. At the same time, UK visitors spent a record £36bn overseas, leading to a record tourism deficit of £20.5bn.

David Savage, a co-author of the report, said: “Spending in the UK is holding up very well. The increase in spending is due to the exchange rate. People will come here with a budget and the difference works in our favour.”

London remained by far the top destination for overseas visitors, with 14.8m trips to the capital last year. Edinburgh had 1.2m visits, Manchester 900,000, Birmingham 800,000 and Glasgow 600,000. Visits to the UK were divided evenly between those on holiday, those visiting friends and family, and people on business trips.

After a sharp drop in visits from the US (3m, down from 3.6m in 2007), France took first place in the table of countries whose residents made the most visits to the UK. The Irish Republic rose to second. But the big spenders were the Americans – who splashed out a total of £2.2bn, representing 14% of all spending by visitors.

Sandie Dawe, the chief executive of Visit Britain, the national tourism agency, said: “The decline in visitor numbers in 2008 was certainly not unexpected. The figures illustrate the continuing challenges of maintaining Britain’s popularity as a destination as the global economic downturn began to bite and in the face of increasing competition from rival destinations.”

She said there were positive signs for the start of 2009, with a weak pound bringing “value for money that other countries cannot match”.

She added: “However, we still expect 2009 to be equally challenging and will be doing all we can to remind international visitors of the many quality experiences they can enjoy here.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds



UK advert ‘implied Gaza in Israel’

An Israeli tourism advert that showed the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as an undisputed part of Israel has been rejected by the advertising watchdog.

The posters, on the London Underground, sparked hundreds of complaints from pro-Palestinian groups and members of the public.

The Advertising Standards Authority said a map labelled Israel implied the occupied territories were in Israel.

Israel’s ministry of tourism said no political message was intended.

It added that its aim was to give tourists an idea of the areas in and around Israel.

But the ASA found the border lines for the Gaza Strip and the West Bank were faintly marked and difficult to see.

And the map was positioned beneath the slogan "few countries pack so much variety into such a small space as Israel", it added.

The ASA said: "We understood that the borders and status of the occupied territories of the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and Golan Heights were the subject of much international dispute, and because we considered that the ad implied that those territories were part of the State of Israel, we concluded that the ad was misleading."

They said the advert must not appear again in the same form.

The watchdog upheld complaints from the Palestinian Solidarity Campaign, Jews for Justice for Palestine and 442 members of the public.

In May, Israel’s tourist ministry admitted it had made a "professional mistake" over the adverts and said no more maps would be used on its posters. </p


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India’s Darjeeling protests hit tea and tourism

New separatist protests by ethnic Nepalis in India’s Darjeeling hills are hampering tourism and threatening to cut production of the area’s eponymous tea by more than 20 percent, industry officials said on Tuesday. The Gurkhas called an indefinite strike on Monday demanding their own federal