The Citizen (Gauteng)

Russians begin to visit Turkish resorts

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Bodrum – The Russians are finally coming but the mayor of this empty Turkish resort doubts their converted rubles will save what looks to be another lost summer.

“We closed the last tourism season down 75% ,” Bodrum mayor Ahmet Aras said in a lavish library overlookin­g the Aegean Sea.

“We expect a recovery from July with the start of flights from Russia and Europe,” but for the sector overall, “that will not happen for a few more years”, he said.

Pandemic curbs on travel wrecked Turkey’s economy by depriving it of foreign revenue to finance debt and support the lira.

The lack of tourists played a large part in the lira’s slide from six to the dollar in March 2020 to around 8.7 now.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government needed an urgent fix therefore to quell public discontent. He tried to coax tourists to Turkish beaches with exemptions from weekend curfews and other coronaviru­s rules.

But quarantine­s placed on travellers returning from Turkey laid the government’s plans to waste.

In 2019, Bodrum airport welcomed a record 4.34 million tourists to a city dubbed the “Turkish Saint-Tropez”.

Traffic slumped by two-thirds last year however, and the airport recorded just 350 000 arrivals between January and May.

Things are finally looking up, and Turkish leaders have their fingers crossed.

“God willing, we will jumpstart tourism and have a tourist push,” Erdogan said this month.

Russia this week lifted a Turkish travel ban that was officially imposed because of the coronaviru­s but which coincided with a spike in geopolitic­al tensions.

And more people are expected once European Union travel rules ease on Thursday.

But the scenic city that stretches from the sea to rolling hills bears little resemblanc­e to the playground of jetsetters and moneyed Istanbulit­es of the past.

“You see all the boats resting on the shore, maybe one of them goes on tour a day,” guide organiser Baris Kasal lamented. “We said the last season was ‘dead’. We are calling this one ‘the walking dead’,” he quipped. “There’s been a little bit of movement but it’s very, very weak.”

Russians make up the largest share of tourists because Turkey is one of the main holiday destinatio­ns they can reach without a visa.

Bodrum airport operations manager Iclal Kayaoglu said it was handling just a 10th of the passengers it did in 2019. “It’s primarily the Russians and British who visit,” she said.

Russians found a way to sneak in even when travel was banned by the Kremlin.

The number of arrivals from Poland spiked after they opted for a circuitous route.

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