A new Lebanese
government's best hope of rebooting its battered economy may lie in efforts to
persuade wealthy Gulf Arab tourists to return after a boycott last year, but it
is a gargantuan task.
Flooded with 400,000
refugees from a Syrian conflict that regularly leaks over the border into the
north of the Mediterranean nation, Lebanon saw four of the Gulf's oil-rich
states tell nationals to stay away in 2012.
The war in Syria has
also shut off a highway that used to bring 300,000 tourists annually into the
country, famous for its beaches, mountains and fine food, helping slash tourist
numbers from the Gulf by 80 percent.
But many in Lebanon
believe that the boycott was more to do with the opposition to its last
government from Saudi Arabia, and caretaker tourist minister Fadi Abboud sees
hope in Prime Minister-designate Tammam Salam's better ties with Riyadh.
"I believe that
the political reasons for the [Gulf] boycott have disappeared," Abboud,
who is continuing his role until Salam forms his new government, told Reuters.
Dropping
tourism, falling economy
Tourism in the
Mediterranean nation accounts for around 15 percent of GDP, but visitor numbers
fell by 17 percent last year, causing overall economic growth to drop to two
percent from 5.2 percent a year earlier.
Abboud said that about
1.5 million tourists visited Lebanon last year, down from a high of just over
two million in 2010 before the outbreak of the conflict in Syria, which has killed
at least 70,000 people according to the United Nations.
So far this year,
visitor numbers already are down by eight percent, suggesting Abboud's hopes of
seeing numbers back above two million this year are unlikely to be met.
Gulf Arabs are drawn to
Lebanon by its cooler climate and a more liberal atmosphere than the
neighboring desert states, but governments encouraged their nationals to stay
away last summer after violence in the northern city of Tripoli and a spate of
kidnappings.
Opportunity
amid challenge
The conflict in Syria,
however, also has cut all land routes from the Gulf to Lebanon, whose only
other border - with Israel - remains a hostile frontline.
Violence also has
spilled over the border, with rocket-fire killing Lebanese residents of the
Bekaa Valley and dozens of people killed in sporadic street fighting in
Tripoli. In October, Lebanon's security chief was assassinated by a powerful
car bomb in the capital Beirut.
But despite the
security challenges, Abboud said Lebanon still hoped to draw visitors from
across the world.
"We have new and
promising markets, including Russia and South America. I think they are all
promising. If the security situation is good we will have a better year than
last," he said.
Sources :
http://www.voanews.com/content/lebanon_hopes_gulf_arabs_will_revitalize_tourism_industry/1644493.html
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