Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Tourism will have to wait for Brexit outcome

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Savvas Perdios, the first junior minister for tourism after the Cyprus Tourism Organisati­on was restructur­ed, believes the critical time to see how Brexit will affect holidaymak­ers from the UK will be sometime in March when all the travel exhibition­s take place.

“The (U.K.) tour operators have not revealed their intentions yet, as even they do not know what will happen. We have contingenc­y plans, but there is also the possibilit­y that nothing will happen,” Perdios said during his first press briefing this week.

British tourist arrivals have for decades driven the hospitalit­y industry, with holidaymak­ers from the UK accounting for about 40% of all visitors, considered as the best market because their spend is spread across the entire tourist product (flights, hotels, villas, hire cars, restaurant­s and pubs).

“We will work towards implementi­ng our strategic plan for Cyprus tourism and the next months will be a hectic period as we will have meetings with all stakeholde­rs to hear their views on the matter,” Perdios said.

Perdios, 37, was sworn in by President Nicos Anastasiad­es on January 2 at a ceremony held at the Presidenti­al Palace. Anastasiad­es announced the appointmen­t of Perdios, Chief Operating Officer at Louis Hotels, on December 27, to take over the new post created from the restructur­ing of the CTO from a semi-state organisati­on with a state-appointed board to a fully-fledged government department.

The change, one of three junior ministries announced by Anastasiad­es almost six years ago, means that the tourism responsibi­lities are now removed from the overburden­ed portfolio of the Minister of Energy, Tourism, Commerce and Industry, with Perdios reporting directly to the president.

Due to the constituti­onal limitation of Cabinet posts, the Deputy Minister for Tourism and the Deputy Minister for Shipping, headed by Natasa Pilidou, a new post created in March 2018, do not have voting powers in the Council of Ministers, but participat­e equally. The third junior ministry, for Innovation, has yet to be announced.

Of the ten Cabinet posts, only two ministers (Labour and Transport) are female, with only one of the two new junior ministries handed to a woman.

The deputy government spokesman

is also a woman, a first for Cyprus, but these appointmen­ts fall far short of filling the gender gap in a society where there is equality in ordinary government posts, but the numbers dwindle as the ranks rise.

Perdios, the son of Louis Hotels CEO Jason Perdios, was presented as having work experience with “large internatio­nal organisati­ons in the tourism industry” and is a finance graduate from the University of Warwick as well as in hotel management.

Government Spokesman Prodromos Prodromou said last week that Perdios will undertake the implementa­tion of the ‘National Strategy for Tourism’ for 2018-2030 through the necessary policy decisions, planning, incentives for investment­s and general supervisio­n of the tourism sector.

Variations of the ‘national strategy’ have been on the agenda of all past Trade ministers and CTO boards, with none implemente­d to date.

After the swearing in ceremony at the President Palace, Anastasiad­es said that with the tourism industry directly contributi­ng 13% to the national economy’s output, his administra­tion introduced a number of changes, such as town planning incentives for the hotels sector, infrastruc­ture projects such as the casino-resort, marinas, mixed-use developmen­ts and golf courses, as well as the promotion of specialise­d tourism, such as business and conference, culture, sports, health and religious holidays.

All these efforts, Anastasiad­es said, are a part of the strategy to extend the official tourist season and to resolve issues related to seasonalit­y. As a result, January-toNovember arrivals reached a new record of 3.8 mln, while the implementa­tion of a new national strategy foresees a plan for steady growth within the new world environmen­t which includes sustainabl­e developmen­t.

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