Kuwait Times

Gulf tourist influx to Bosnia fuels luxury developmen­ts

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SARAJEVO: With 360 villas and apartments around an artificial lake, swimming pools, a halal supermarke­t and a Muslim prayer area, the ‘Sarajevo resort’ is one of Bosnia’s most ambitious residentia­l projects to date. It is one of dozens of real estate ventures in the picturesqu­e hills surroundin­g the capital of the Balkan country that are specifical­ly targeting visitors from Gulf states. The lush greenery of the country has in recent years become a magnet for wealthy Arabs looking to escape the Middle Eastern summer heat. The result has been a massive boost to tourism in what is one of Europe’s poorest countries.

“People from the Gulf are attracted by the natural beauty, the presence of Islam and the warmth of Bosnians,” said Tarek Al Khaja, Emirati co-owner of tourist and real estate agency Al Suwaidi and Al Khaja. “They feel welcome here.” Khaja, who opened his business three years ago in a Sarajevo suburb, said the housing and real estate market was in “constant growth”.

Prices, he said, had increased “up to 100 percent in three years” in the Sarajevo region of Bosnia, a nation still rebuilding after its devastatin­g 1990s inter-ethnic war.

In 2010 Bosnia began phasing out visas for nationals of most Gulf countries and the number of tourists from the region has since steadily increased to 24,500 out of 360,000 visitors to the Sarajevo area last year, according to official figures. “They are not the most numerous, but these Gulf tourists spend much more than others, about 150 euros per day per person in addition to hotel costs,” said Asja Hadziefend­ic Mesic, spokeswoma­n for the Sarajevo tourist board.

At the October opening of the Sarajevo resort, a Ä25million ($27-million) Kuwaiti investment, local schoolchil­dren waved the flags of both Bosnia and Kuwait as Bosnian Muslim political leader Bakir Izetbegovi­c hailed the country’s rivers and greenery. “Bosnia is a European country... it has water, forestry, mining, and energy and tourism potential. Our brothers (from the Gulf) spotted this,” he said. About 20 km away in Blazuj village, another residentia­l area is being built by the Kuwaiti company AlDiyar, which sold almost all of its luxury apartments in advance to Gulf nationals.

“So far we have invested 14 million euros. The customers are different, there is no profile,” said director Abdullah Al-Kulaib. “We had those who knew nothing about Bosnia, who never set a foot here, even some who do not like nature, but they are buying,” he said, adding that the company was preparing another six similar projects. The grandest of the proposed ventures comes from Emirati company Buroj Property Developmen­t, which in October announced a Ä930-million investment to build an entire “tourist city” on a plot of 137 hectares.

Work is set to begin in April on the complex at the foot of Bjelasnica, one of four mountains surroundin­g Sarajevo. The design includes thousands of homes, several hotels, a shopping mall and a hospital. One of the key drivers in attracting Arab investment has been the Bosna Bank Internatio­nal (BBI), founded in Sarajevo in 2000 by Gulf banks on Islamic banking principles, which organises an annual conference to draw such finance to the Balkans. “This is just the beginning, we just opened the door,” said Amer Bukvic, BBI director. He suggested that political instabilit­y in the Middle East has also fuelled Gulf nationals’ interest in buying a pied-a-terre in Europe, “in case it is needed”.

The facilities already in place for Bosnia’s Muslims - about 40 percent of the 3.8 million-strong population - make the country an especially attractive choice for such visitors. “When they want to eat in restaurant­s, they don’t have to ask whether it is halal. There are also mosques everywhere where they can pray,” said Khaja. During and after Bosnia’s 1992-1995 war, Gulf countries offered humanitari­an aid and financed the reconstruc­tion of homes and mosques, often accompanie­d by stricter interpreta­tions of Islam, such as Saudi Wahabism.

A small minority of Bosnian Muslims adopted these stricter forms, and local analysts have consistent­ly warned against the religious influence that accompanie­d foreign aid. While hoteliers and restaurate­urs now welcome the injection of Arab tourists’ cash - even offering menus in Arabic - others have observed the phenomenon with caution. Some media outlets and users of online forums have spoken of an “invasion” or even suggested that the region around the capital is becoming an “emirate”. “The Gaza Strip of Sarajevo”, appeared as a September headline in the magazine Slobodna Bosna (Free Bosnia).

A hotelier in the capital, declining to be named, told AFP that he had benefited from the “rush” of Gulf tourists in recent years, but was firmly opposed to the constructi­on of neighborho­ods intended only for Arab customers. “They will use these houses and apartments maybe a month or two a year, paying once at the beginning and never again. The best tourist for a country is the one who rents a hotel room,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? SARAJEVO: A picture taken on Jan 19, 2016 shows several houses under constructi­on in Sarajevo’s suburban area of Blazuj. (Inset) Abdullah Al-Kulaib, the Kuwait co-owner of real estate agency Al-Diyar. — AFP
SARAJEVO: A picture taken on Jan 19, 2016 shows several houses under constructi­on in Sarajevo’s suburban area of Blazuj. (Inset) Abdullah Al-Kulaib, the Kuwait co-owner of real estate agency Al-Diyar. — AFP
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