China Daily (Hong Kong)

Turkey expects tourism rebound despite losses

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ANKARA — Turkey is hoping to revive tourism in the coming weeks with a strict plan, but visitor numbers and revenues will still drop amid the “new normal” and affect the economy during the COVID-19 pandemic, experts say.

Turkey expects to resume domestic tourism in late May and internatio­nal tourism after mid-June, Culture and Tourism Minister Mehmet Nuri Ersoy said earlier this month.

“I hope tourism will start with some tourism mobility domestical­ly by May 28,” he tells broadcaste­r NTV.

“We also expect internatio­nal tourism to start with some countries after mid-June.”

The first source countries may be Asian, including China and South Korea, he says.

Turkey’s tourism sector said on Thursday that it looks forward to attracting Chinese tourists once the pandemic is fully contained.

“China is a huge market, and we are attaching significan­t importance to the country and Chinese people,” Firuz Baglikaya, head of the

Associatio­n of Turkish Travel Agencies, said at an online news conference in Istanbul.

Baglikaya says that China and Turkey will continue to improve their already strong ties when conditions return to normal in the postpandem­ic era.

“We have our most prestigiou­s tour operators in China, trying to promote Turkey in the best way possible to the Chinese people,” Baglikaya says.

“They would continue to prepare suitable holiday packages for them and provide their favorite types of vacations in the best ways possible.”

Baglikaya also notes that a staterun promotion office is preparing to carry out activities in China.

Turkey received over 420,000 Chinese in 2019, when the county’s annual tourism revenue hit $34.5 billion, according to official data.

Ersoy stresses that Turkey started a detailed certificat­ion program for hotels during the novel coronaviru­s outbreak.

“It (the certificat­ion program) was the first in the world, and the

EU also decided to initiate a similar one,” the minister says.

Tourism accounts for around 10 percent of the nation’s GDP.

Before the pandemic, Ankara had set a target of $41 billion and 58 million tourists, but these are now virtually inconceiva­ble.

“If we could meet over half of this target, I believe it would be a success,” says Ankara-based travel agency manager Serkan Yagci.

“The year started horribly. And this virus is not ready to leave us alone. For us as travel agencies, it’s possibly the biggest crisis that we’ve had to live through, and we don’t know how domestic and foreign tourists are going to react to the new norms defined by the authoritie­s.”

The Tourism Ministry will reportedly resume tourism under the guidance of 132 specific and comprehens­ive measures.

Turkey has launched telephone diplomacy with 70 countries to inform them about its health infrastruc­ture and assure them that Turkey is safe for travel, Ersoy says.

Protective suits and facial masks will be available at the entrance of every tourism facility, and body temperatur­es will be recorded using thermal sensors.

Tourism representa­tives say open buffets like those found in many allinclusi­ve hotels will be suspended. Likewise, group tours will be required to reduce member numbers.

Currently, 90 to 95 percent of tourism facilities across the country are closed.

Irfan Karsli, who owns the Istanbul-based Ligarba travel agency, hails the measures but says prospects aren’t optimistic this year.

“We still don’t know if the pandemic will allow us to have a tourism season. Even if we can control the health situation, we have to give assurances to our clients that everything will be OK once they are here, and this is difficult,” he says.

He believes Asian tourists will be reluctant to travel to Turkey in the coming months.

“Businesspe­ople, academics and other related profession­als from

Asia will eventually return to Turkey. But I think that traditiona­l tourists will skip Turkey or any other country for some time,” he says.

In order to make up for some of the losses, Turkey will next week start accepting foreign patients from 31 countries, such as Greece, Russia, Germany, Britain, the Netherland­s and Pakistan, within the health-tourism framework.

COVID-19 positive health tourists aren’t allowed in hospitals.

Turkey has become a destinatio­n for health tourism in recent years, attracting over 1 million inbound patients in 2018, according to official data.

 ?? AP ?? Turkish teenagers sit by the Golden Horn in Istanbul on May 15. The country expects to resume domestic tourism in late May and internatio­nal tourism after mid-June.
AP Turkish teenagers sit by the Golden Horn in Istanbul on May 15. The country expects to resume domestic tourism in late May and internatio­nal tourism after mid-June.

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