The Phnom Penh Post

In desert dunes, electro fans rave about Tunisia tourism

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BASS rhythms boom out across the Tunisian Sahara toward a herd of camels, lasers splash colours across the dunes and VIPs sip vodka in what was once a Star Wars movie set.

The Dunes Electroniq­ue music festival, launched in 2014, was revived last weekend on the set where US director George Lucas created the desert planet of Tatooine.

The festival marked a joyous and noisy comeback after a three-year silence following several deadly jihadist attacks in the North African country which also badly hit its tourism sector.

In a sign of the growing appeal of the remote Saharan region and its other-worldly landscapes, more than 20 internatio­nal and local DJs and thousands of revellers converged on the desert site of Ong Jmal in southwest Tunisia for the two-day extravagan­za.

“We had a l ready v i site d Tunis, but this time we came a ll t he way here for t he festiva l,” said Leopold Poignant, a 22-yea r-old st udent f rom Pa r is who pla nned to a lso v isit t he nearby oasis town of

Tozeur af ter t he part y.

He said they were drawn by DJs like Adam Port and Konstantin Sibold, “but we’ve also come for the experience. This is a Star Wars setting, and partying in the dunes is really something”.

The event was held around the circular constructi­ons built 20 years ago as settings for the Star Wars space-opera.

Ong Jmal is the best known of several sites in Tunisia where Lucas shot scenes of the youth of his hero Luke Skywalker. Each year, tens of thousands of tourists walk through the sand-swept set taking selfies.

As music played non-stop for 30 hours, those not dancing were huddled in nomadic tents set up as “chill zones” or, given the very real night-time desert chill, around camp fires.

Most of the 5,000 revellers were Tunisians, some of whom had never visited the area before.

“I’m a city girl, I don’t like these traditiona­l areas, but now there are many events in the south so I ended up coming,” said Zoubeida.

Army and pol i c e were deployed around the party site, located less than 40km from the Algerian border.

The 2011 revolution which toppled longtime autocrat Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and the jihadist attacks that killed dozens of tourists in 2015 dealt a heavy blow to Tunisia’s vital tourism sector.

Although the south was not directly targeted in the attacks, visits to the region have dwindled to mostly one-night outings from coastal resorts.

“The biggest number of tourists now are Russians, and they only buy water on their way to the desert,” said Nagga Ramzi, a shopkeeper with kohl-lined eyes.

“It’s hard. There’s nothing here but dates . . . and tourism.”

Tourism revival

Years after the attacks, largescale tourism has returned to Tunisia and the south hosts a growing number of events.

A Saharan ultra-marathon, the Tozeur Internatio­nal Film Festival and a Sufi music festival called Rouhaniyet have all been launched.

Hotels are more often fully booke d, a nd t ou r i s t s a r e starting to stay a little longer.

Visitor numbers have grown continuous­ly over the past three years, according to Tozeur’s tourism commission­er, Yasser Souf.

For January 1-October 30, the number has grown by 27 per cent, compared to the same period of this year.

Some hotels are reopening, smaller guest houses have multiplied and Thai luxury hotel group Anantara is launching a five-star palace at the end of December.

Salah Akkoun, a horse carriage driver, hopes tourists will patronise local businesses and learn to “take their time” in the desert.

 ?? AFP ?? People dance at the electronic music festival ‘Les Dunes Electroniq­ues’ at Ong Jmel, near the town of Nefta in western Tunisia, on Saturday.
AFP People dance at the electronic music festival ‘Les Dunes Electroniq­ues’ at Ong Jmel, near the town of Nefta in western Tunisia, on Saturday.
 ?? HO / US FOREST SERVICE/AFP ?? These still images taken from a video provided by the US Forest Service show the moment a gender reveal party sparked a wildfire in Green Valley, Arizona, in April 2017.
HO / US FOREST SERVICE/AFP These still images taken from a video provided by the US Forest Service show the moment a gender reveal party sparked a wildfire in Green Valley, Arizona, in April 2017.

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