Sunday Tribune

Tourism takes a knock following Paris attack

- Dominique Vidalon and Ingrid Melander Paris

THE CARNAGE in Paris has sent shudders through the tourism sector in one of the world’s most visited cities with hotel owners, tour operators and others in the industry hoping the expected drop-off in visitors will not last long.

Shares in tourism companies fell sharply across Europe on Monday on expectatio­ns that people will cut back travel plans after Islamist militants launched co-ordinated attacks across Paris killing at least 129 people in locations of the type that might be visited by tourists.

The Eiffel Tower, Louvre museum and other attraction­s reopened on Monday after shutting due to the killings, though Disneyland Paris stayed closed on Tuesday.

“It is going to be very difficult in the coming days. The sector is going to hurt,” said Georges Panayotis, the president and chief executive of hospitalit­y research group MKG.

The damage to tourism would be greater than after the January attack on the Charlie Hebdo magazine and a kosher supermarke­t, since it was bigger and broader, Panayotis said. “The entire world is looking at France,” he said.

France has been on high alert since the January attack by Islamist gunmen who killed 17 people.

Islamic State (IS) claimed responsibi­lity for the latest killings in retal- iation for French air strikes in Iraq and Syria. Gunmen systematic­ally killed at least 89 people at a rock concert by a US band before blowing themselves up. In another attack gunmen fired randomly into a bar.

Between people who cancelled trips and those who shortened their stays, the industry is sure to see an impact, but Francois Navarro, the managing director of the Comite Regional du Tourisme Ile de France, said it was too early to give figures.

‘No panic’

“Feedback I am getting from visitors and tour operators is that there is no panic,” he said. “There will be an impact. The question is: will it last until the Christmas holidays or will business pick up in the next 15 days?”

Hotel group Marriott is waiving cancellati­on fees for bookings at its 15 properties in Paris until November 28 and has increased security at a number of them.

Along the banks of the Seine vendors were nervous at the traditiona­l stalls that sell postcards and souvenirs from the “City of Light”.

“I fear for the season to come, from now on it will go downhill,” said Florence Muller, who works at a stall near Notre Dame cathedral. “Travel agencies tell us US tourists are cancelling their trips.”

On Monday morning, the line of people outside the cathedral was much shorter than usual, according to Christophe, who makes a living driving tourists around in his bicycle rickshaw.

“There’s just no one, there’s a huge difference,” he said. “We can see that people are afraid, just by the way they behave. The Christmas season is coming soon and it’s usually great business for us between midDecembe­r and the first week of January. It won’t be the same this time.”

In addition to police officers on patrol, there were a handful of soldiers with machine guns near the cathedral’s entrance.

I fear for the season to come, from now on it will go downhill. Travel agencies tell us US tourists are cancelling.

On the Paris bourse, Air France, Aeroports de Paris, Eurotunnel and hotel group Accor closed down 4 percent or more over concern that tourism will see a downturn.

Air France, however, said it had seen no immediate impact on plane occupancy over the weekend and that it was maintainin­g its flight schedules for the coming days.

“There have been no massive cancellati­ons of trips or people deciding to leave the country,” a spokeswoma­n said. “It has been a normal weekend for operations.”

Travel company Thomas Cook, which has the greatest number of foreign visitors to France across the Channel, said it had already assisted two bookings where couples had chosen to leave France early.

Effective immediatel­y, the British company’s policy allows for free amendments or cancellati­ons for customers with future bookings to Paris and Disneyland Paris, up to and including November 20.

The Eiffel Tower reopened on Monday. From nightfall until midnight on Tuesday, it was lit up in blue, white and red with a projection of Paris’s city motto “Fluctuat Nec Mergitur,” which means tossed by the waves but does not sink.

Mourning

Disneyland Paris was closed on Tuesday as part of France’s threeday national mourning period. The theme park, which receives 14.8 million visits per year, said it was too early to discuss the financial impact.

So far the impact on business events has been mixed. The New York Times Internatio­nal Luxury Conference, which was to kick off on Monday at the Palace of Versailles, has been reschedule­d, though the European Wind Energy Associatio­n is going ahead with a conference it is hosting this week.

France, which has been struggling to revive its economy, is normally the most-visited country in the world, with Paris hosting 32.2 million visitors last year.

Following the Charlie Hebdo attack, Paris hotels saw their occupancy rates drop 3 percent to 5 percent between January 8 and 12, with the drop accelerati­ng to 10 percent from January 15 to January 18, MKG research group figures showed.

The bloodshed on the streets of the French capital follow recent attacks claimed by IS on a Russian plane killing 224 people and bombings in Lebanon in which 43 died, all linked to the war in Syria.

It was the worst such attack in Europe since the Madrid train bombings of 2004, in which terrorists killed 191 people.

“There is a point in the public psyche where a succession of isolated events link together to create a pattern,” Virginie Maisonneuv­e said in a report. “This of course could have a negative impact on sentiment and in turn on economic growth at a time when global growth is fragile.”

At London’s St Pancras station, the terminus for Eurostar trains between London and Paris, most travellers said they would carry on travelling, despite feeling jittery.

Liam Smith said he and his partner were going through with plans to visit Paris this weekend.

“I’d be lying if I said I was completely at ease,” Smith said, but added: “Once we start letting attacks like these change how we live our lives, we’re giving the attackers what they want: control and power through fear.” – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Christmas holiday lights illuminate Champs Elysees avenue leading up to the Arc de Triomphe in Paris this week. The city, which boasts the world’s highest tourism figures, has seen a drop in visitor numbers.
PHOTO: REUTERS Christmas holiday lights illuminate Champs Elysees avenue leading up to the Arc de Triomphe in Paris this week. The city, which boasts the world’s highest tourism figures, has seen a drop in visitor numbers.

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