The Citizen (Gauteng)

Hey, big spender – welcome

Putin’s people scarce, but French Riviera flourishes

- © Agence France-Presse

Private chef Selim M’nasri used to cook for wealthy Russians on the French Riviera once a month, but he says it has been “radio silence” from them since Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

So the 34-year-old Nice cook is now working for top athletes and other rich clients.

The Covid pandemic – and now Western sanctions on Moscow over the Ukraine war – have kept rich Russians away from the French Riviera, one of their favourite foreign destinatio­ns.

But the region does not appear to have had trouble finding big spenders from other countries to make up for the loss of its Russian visitors.

The pandemic had already caused an 80% drop in the number of Russian tourists in the Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur region, according to the head of the local tourism committee, Francois de Canson.

After Paris, it is the second most popular French destinatio­n for Russian visitors. And it is a historic hotspot, too – Russian visitors have stayed here in “sumptuous villas since the 19th century”, de Canson added.

Russia may not account for the largest number of tourists, but in the past, they could be relied on to bring enormous wealth to the coast.

“It’s not a huge volume,” said Denis Zanon, general manager of the Nice metropolit­an tourist office. “But there is a fringe of this market with a lot of money, who live on the coast and whose guests rent villas, bringing work to the luxury hoteliers, yacht rental companies, and private caterers.”

French Riviera workers in these industries have noticed the change. Lea Combelonge, who worked as a private chef during the pandemic, has lost her rich Russian customers, too.

They could be complicate­d clients – sometimes making lastminute orders for caviar – but they were also generous, she said.

It hasn’t been difficult to make up the lost business though, she added, because “there are rich people everywhere”.

M’nasri agreed. “There’s plenty of work,” he said.

The European Union has blackliste­d hundreds of Russian oligarchs and politician­s since Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014, adding many more following the outbreak of the war in Ukraine.

But many ordinary Russian families living in France have stayed on the coast, according to Thomas de Pariente, deputy director of tourism in Cannes.

“You can still hear Russian spoken on the Croisette,” he said, referring to the city’s famous beachfront promenade.

But a new “high-contributi­on” clientele, from Qatar and the United States in particular, has helped tourism on the Riviera rebound since the reopening of borders, he said.

The tourism sector had been courting new customers, including Scandinavi­an and Canadian visitors, even before the pandemic began.

Promotiona­l campaigns have helped “limit the damage”, said president of the region Renaud Muselier.

There are now three daily direct flights between Nice and New York.

A Nice-Montreal flight has also opened.

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 ?? ?? WHAT A VIEW. Menton, a commune society in Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur in France, attracts rich tourists.
WHAT A VIEW. Menton, a commune society in Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur in France, attracts rich tourists.
 ?? Pictures: iStock ?? CRUISING. The port of Antibes on the French Riviera.
Pictures: iStock CRUISING. The port of Antibes on the French Riviera.
 ?? ?? SUNNY DISPOSITIO­N. A bar at Cours Saleya in Nice.
SUNNY DISPOSITIO­N. A bar at Cours Saleya in Nice.

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