Arab News

Welcome to Pakistan: Islamabad to issue tourist visa ‘on arrival’ for 24 countries

Middle Eastern countries are missing from the list

- SIB KAIFEE

ISLAMABAD: “Tourists welcome to Pakistan,” Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority tweeted over the weekend, unveiling the country’s renewed visaon-arrival policy for group tourists from 24 countries – a decision praised by the Pakistan Tourism and Developmen­t Corporatio­n (PTDC), which its officials had been pursuing for years to expand the tourism industry.

PTDC official Mukhtar Ali, who manages policy and promotion, told Arab News: “This policy was issued with consultati­on of all stakeholde­rs. It was done in 2007 also but the deteriorat­ing law and order situation impacted the policy which was reversed and a case-to-case visa grant procedure was applied. But the situation has changed now.”

The tweet came after a notificati­on from the interior ministry to the Federal Investigat­ion Agency (FIA) immigratio­n wing to relax entry for nationals arriving from “touristfri­endly countries,” if the “tour is organized through designated tour operators” in Pakistan.

After arrival, tourists are required to meet an immigratio­n officer for further informatio­n and must furnish relevant documents and sign official forms before the granting of a visa.

The FIA can issue a multiple-entry 30-day visa on arrival to nationals of the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, China, Japan, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s, Spain, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Greece, Belgium, Austria, Finland, Iceland, Korea, Portugal, Singapore, Thailand, and Luxemburg.

Chaudhry Abdul Ghafoor, managing director of the PTDC, said: “We will focus on overseas Pakistanis and foreign tourists during the year 2018. Visa policy for foreign tourists is required to be reviewed to facilitate more tourists from across the world.”

Ghafoor said that the British Backpacker Society has ranked Pakistan among the 20 top travel destinatio­ns for 2018.

Missing from the list are countries of the Middle East and Africa, among others.

“The number of Arab nationals (visiting Pakistan for tourism) is very low. We have focused on touristgen­erating countries based on our statistics and the majority come from the West and elsewhere. A large number of them are those that seek mountainee­ring and adventure tourism,” said Ali.

He said tourism has been increasing gradually over the years but after 2013, after military operations to cleanse militancy and terrorism, the influx has jumped. In 2017, an estimated 1.7 million foreigners visited Pakistan, which is 200,000 more than the previous year, Ali added without specifying the number of tourists and business-related visitors.

Nasir Hussain, owner of Karakorum Explorers, a leading tour operator in Islamabad, told Arab News: “Individual­s not part of a group can also visit and link up with a tour operator for discovery trips, safaris, or adventures.” He is enthusiast­ic that revenue will come to the tourism industry, which has faced losses since 9/11.

He said most of his customers are from European countries but “it would be good to have tourists from the Middle East, though not many travel for tourism or holidays to this destinatio­n.”

Pakistan is also allowing a 30-day single-entry business visa on arrival for 68 countries, including the Middle East. A letter of invitation from a Pakistani business entity is required, attached with a recommenda­tion letter from a trade associatio­n or Chamber of Commerce and/or one from an investment counsellor or commercial attaché in Pakistan’s Mission Abroad.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia