Global Times

Paris tourism loses 750m euros after terror attacks

Huge investment needed in sector: official

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Islamist attacks, strikes and floods kept foreign tourists away from the French capital in the first half of the year and cost the Paris region’s tourism industry some 750 million euros ($ 849.38 million) in lost revenue, officials said Tuesday.

“It’s time to realize that the tourism sector is going through an industrial disaster. This is no longer the time for communicat­ion campaigns but to set up a relief plan,” Frederic Valletoux, head of the Paris region tourist board said in a statement on Tuesday.

Valletoux said massive investment­s were needed to protect jobs in the sector and he urged Foreign Minister JeanMarc Ayrault to quickly meet with local tourism officials.

About 500,000 people in Ile- de- France have jobs linked to tourism, making it the biggest industry in the region.

France, which is seeking to revive its economy, depends heavily on tourism, which generates over 7 percent of national gross domestic product and over 13 percent of that of the Ile- de- France region, which includes Paris, the world’s most visited city.

France’s tourism industry has suffered since Islamic State gunmen killed 130 people in an attack in Paris last year. It was dealt further blows in July when a gunman drove a truck into crowds celebratin­g Bastille Day on July 14 in the Riviera city of Nice. Two weeks later, two men killed a priest in a small town in Normandy. Strikes against a controvers­ial labor reform and floods in June also deterred tourists.

Nightly hotel stays were down 8.5 percent in the ParisIle de- France region in the first half, with an 11.5 percent decline for foreign tourists and a 4.8 percent drop for French tourists. Japanese visitors were down 46.2 percent in the first half compared with the same period in 2015, while Russians were down 35 percent, Chinese down 19.6 percent, and Americans down 5.7 percent, the Paris region tourist board statement said. France is the most- visited country in the world, with almost 85 million foreigners last year, including 16 million in Paris.

Visitors to the Arc de Triomphe fell more than one- third in the first half of 2016 from the same period a year earlier, the tourist board said.

Weak activity in France contribute­d to a fall in first- half operating profit for French group AccorHotel­s. Air France- KLM has said it expects its unit revenues to decline in July and August, partly due to the situation in France.

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