Jamaica Gleaner

Visa abolished for Russian visitors

- Janet Silvera Senior Gleaner Writer erica.virtue@gleanerjm.com janet.silvera@gleanerjm.com

WESTERN BUREAU: VISA RESTRICTIO­NS have been abolished for certain categories of Russians travelling to Jamaica, 48 years after the two countries officially establishe­d bilateral relations.

Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett made the announceme­nt last Friday during a welcome reception for the inaugural Nordwind Airlines flight by Pegas Touristik at the Sangster Internatio­nal Airport.

The historic flight carried the last group of Russians who required visas to enter the country.

“Last month, our government agreed to amend the agreement with your government to waive visa requiremen­ts for periods not exceeding 90 days per year. What this means is that coming here as a tourist, or to do business, gives you up to 90 clear days without you having to be concerned about visa requiremen­ts,” Bartlett told Russian travel agents and crew members at the ceremony.

The flight had some 283 passengers, all spending between 10 days and two weeks in Jamaica. Pegas will operate the flight between Moscow and Jamaica every 10 days up to May 2019, adding approximat­ely 5,400 new tourists to the island’s visitor statistics.

Bartlett said Jamaica recognised that even as a lot of weight is given to the safety and security of both Jamaicans and visitors to the island, today’s traveller is expecting much more to attract his spending dollar.

DIPLOMATIC ARRANGEMEN­TS

The lifting of the visa restrictio­ns, the tourism minister said, was in keeping with the global technology wave which provides access to biometrics, the use of IOT (Internet of things) and facial recognitio­n, which “have made the need for traditiona­l visa regimes less and less important in the world”.

According to Bartlett, all the major tourism countries of the world are now using e-visas and technology to facilitate easier access to visa eliminatio­n depending, of course, on the nature of the diplomatic arrangemen­ts that they have.

“So, we will in fact in time be using a combinatio­n of those because visas still remain our methodolog­y by which we can determine who comes to our destinatio­n,” said Bartlett.

He noted that Russia is not only a new frontier to source visitors for the Caribbean tourism market, but is also the fourth largest market source for visitors to the Dominican Republic, with which Jamaica has establishe­d a multi-destinatio­n MOU.

This, he said, gives the island access to the growing market of Russian millennial­s who have a very high purchasing power.

He noted that the Russian authoritie­s played a major role in helping to seal the deal, which resulted in Pegas making Jamaica one of its routes.

 ?? JANET SILVERA/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Minister of Tourism Edmund Bartlett (right) and Russian Embassy Consular Officer Alexsei Sazonov (second right) greet passengers arriving on the inaugural Nordwind Airlines from Russia at the Sangster Internatio­nal Airport last Friday.
JANET SILVERA/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Minister of Tourism Edmund Bartlett (right) and Russian Embassy Consular Officer Alexsei Sazonov (second right) greet passengers arriving on the inaugural Nordwind Airlines from Russia at the Sangster Internatio­nal Airport last Friday.

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