Qatar Tribune

Greek tourism operators see massive drop in 2020 arrivals

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GREEK tourism operators on Thursday said they expect a 70-percent drop in arrivals this year after the government announced the season could restart in mid-June.

“Arrivals will be down by at least 70 percent,” Greek hoteliers chief Grigoris Tasios told SKAI TV, adding that a “maximum” of eight to nine million visitors could be expected.

Irini Toliou, head of the Greek associatio­n of congress organisers, agreed with the estimate.

“We have July to September left to work, provided (the virus) does not return in September,” she told state TV ERT.

According to Bank of Greece figures, the country in 2019 had over 4 million visitors producing revenue of over 1 billion euros ( 20 billion).

The government on Wednesday said the tourism period would begin on June 1 with the first resumption of internatio­nal flights through Athens airport.

Direct flights to the Greek islands will begin July 1.

Restaurant­s and bars are scheduled to reopen on Monday after open-air archaeolog­ical sites opened this week. Museums are to reopen on June 1 .

With Greece suffering fewer than 170 COVID-19 deaths over two months into the pandemic, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Wednesday said Athen’s prompt response to the virus would be a “passport of safety, credibilit­y and health” to attract visitors.

Tourism Minister Harry Theocharis has said a list of nations resuming flights to Greece would be announced by the end of May, with a focus on reviving a travel front “from

The government on Wednesday said the tourism period would begin on June 15 with the first resumption of internatio­nal flights through Athens airport

the Balkans to the Baltic.”

Bulgarians and northern Europeans including Germans will be among the first visitors, the minister said, in addition to Israelis and Cypriots.

Incoming travellers will not be required to undergo virus testing or quarantine, but sample tests will be carried out in tourist areas for epidemiolo­gical purposes, the tourism minister said on Wednesday.

Still recovering from a decade-long debt crisis, Greece badly needs tourism income that directly and indirectly accounts for over a fifth of the economy.

Many operators have expressed scepticism about reopening owing to strict spacing rules.

 ?? (AFP) ?? People sit on a hill facing the ancient Temple of Parthenon atop the Acropolis hill in Athens recently.
(AFP) People sit on a hill facing the ancient Temple of Parthenon atop the Acropolis hill in Athens recently.

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