Oman Daily Observer

Saudi will begin issuing tourist visas in 2018

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia will begin issuing tourist visas in the first quarter of 2018, its top tourism official said, a first for the kingdom as it undergoes major economic and social reforms.

Prince Sultan bin Salman bin Abdulaziz said that “all government approvals” are in place for the launch of electronic visas next year to “all nationals whose countries allow their citizens to visit” the Gulf state.

“We are now just preparing the regulation­s — who is eligible for the visas and how to obtain them,” added the head of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage, who is a son of King Salman.

The move to open up its tourism sector is a major shift for Saudi Arabia as Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman seeks to radically overhaul the country’s oil-dependent economy.

Saudi Arabia currently grants tourist visas for a limited number of countries, but even those applicatio­ns involve a range of restrictio­ns, including requiremen­ts to travel through an accredited company and stay at designated hotels.

Prince Sultan said the cost of the new tourist visa had not yet been settled, but stressed that it would be “as low as possible, because we believe the cumulative economic impact is greater than the cash from the visa”.

In recent months, Saudi Arabia has broken with some of its most rigid rules — lifting a cinema ban, allowing genders to mix at a national celebratio­n and announcing that women will be allowed to drive from next June. Prince Mohammed in August announced a massive tourism project to turn 50 islands and a string of sites on the Red Sea into luxury resorts. “The kingdom is a very big treasure. People know it only in the narrowest possible terms,” Prince Sultan said, describing the vast country’s mountains, beaches and hundreds of islands along the Red Sea coast.

“We’re not just oil traders,” he added, an outlook in line with that of the powerful crown prince who is working to revamp perception­s of the kingdom.

The kingdom will not be lifting its total ban on alcohol.

“We are the country of the Two Holy Mosques, the country of Islam, and this enormous advantage cannot be relinquish­ed... for the sake of driving up tourism figures,” he said.

Tourists are coming to get “the Saudi experience”, Prince Sultan said, adding: “There is a limit, as in any other country... and we do not want tourism to come at any price.”

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