Philippine Daily Inquirer

NO BORA? TOURISM DOING WELL—DOT

- By Dexter Cabalza @dexcabalza­INQ

Who needs Boracay? Despite the closure of the world-famous island resort on April 26, tourist arrivals in the country jumped to an “alltime” high in the first half of the year, according to the Department of Tourism (DOT).

Visitor arrivals from January to June 2018 grew 10.40 percent to 3,706,721 compared with numbers in the same period last year, according to the DOT’s Statistics, Economic Analysis and Informatio­n Management Division.

While Korea remained to be the top source of tourists, sending 815,683 visitors to the Philippine­s, the number of tourists coming from China grew to 645,089 or 17.4 percent of total arrivals.

The next biggest tourist sources were the United States (557,833), Japan (316,060), Australia (140,260), Canada (121,098), Taiwan (120,540), United Kingdom (102,443), Singapore (91,736), Malaysia (73,663), Hong Kong (69,995), and India (63,089).

Aggressive campaign

Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat, in a statement, credited partnershi­ps with the private sector with the sustained leap in foreign tourist arrivals.

She said the DOT continued its marketing promotion campaign and took “aggressive actions to create new air routes and develop new tourism products.”

The efforts, she said, “resulted in stellar performanc­e.”

Puyat had asked the Bureau of Immigratio­n to hasten processing of tourist visas, particular­ly of those from China, in a bid to increase tourist arrivals.

With Boracay closed, Puyat said she was “optimistic” that the country’s target of 7.4 million tourist arrivals by the end of 2018 would be achieved.

On track

“We are actually on track. We are halfway of the year and we are already halfway of our National Tourism Developmen­t Plan target arrivals,” she said.

The island of Boracay accounted for more than 1 million of a total of 6.6 million tourist arrivals in the country last year.

After being called by President Duterte as a cesspool, however, Boracay has been closed to tourists for six months while undergoing rehabilita­tion since April 26.

Environmen­t Secretary Roy Cimatu, however, said Boracay would be reopened on Oct. 26, or just three months after rehabilita­tion work started.

 ?? LYN RILLON ?? RESORT EXPERIENCE Asian tourists try a fish spa in Boracay weeks before its closure on April 26.—
LYN RILLON RESORT EXPERIENCE Asian tourists try a fish spa in Boracay weeks before its closure on April 26.—

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