The Oakland Press

Italy seeks to boost tourism by opening borders June 3

- By Colleen Barry

VENICE, ITALY » The Italian government announced Saturday that it will throw open its borders next month, effectivel­y ending Europe’s longest and strictest coronaviru­s lockdown just as the summer tourism season gets under way.

Both regional and internatio­nal borders will open June 3, with the government eliminatin­g a 14-day quarantine for anyone arriving from abroad. Many hope the move will revive a decimated tourist industry, which is worth 13% of Italy’s gross domestic product.

Such an opening is exactly what tourism operators have been waiting for — even if European neighbors so far appeared be wary of the unilateral Italian announceme­nt.

“We hope to work with the neighborin­g countries, those who can travel by car,” said Gianni Serandrei, the owner of the 4-star Hotel Saturnia near St. Mark’s Square.

The hotel’s last guest — a determined couple of honeymoone­rs from Argentina — checked out around March 11, days after Italy’s lockdown. And when phones have rung in recent months, it has been with cancellati­ons, with only a few reservatio­ns for 2021 trickling in.

Serandrei said that Saturnia’s clients are overwhelmi­ngly foreign, making open borders and an eventual resumption of air traffic key to a successful season. With no clear indication of when more regular air traffic will resume, he is looking forward to further signals before committing to a June 3 opening. The caution may be merited.

Germany — whose border is about a 4-hour drive from Venice through Austria — is instructin­g citizens not to travel abroad for tourism until at least June 15. And officials in neighborin­g France made clear that they had sought a coordinate­d European effort on border openings, indicating Italy had jumped the gun.

During a visit to a Normandy beach, Interior Minister Christophe Castaner said on Saturday that European countries should work together in solidarity and held out the possibilit­y of France acting to protect its citizens.

Italy’s national hotel federation said that by April the sector had already shed 106,000 jobs, with occupancy dropping by 99% for foreigners and 96% for Italians. Another half a million jobs are at risk if the summer season does not take off, according to the associatio­n.

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