The Guardian (USA)

Amsterdam mayor urges extreme caution over return of tourism to the city

- Senay Boztas

It might have lost 90% of its hotel bookings but Amsterdam shouldn’t rush to welcome back internatio­nal tourists, according to its mayor. Femke Halsema has sparked anger in the hotel industry by warning the city should be “extremely cautious” about restarting tourism, saying there is not enough space for its 800,000 inhabitant­s, plus the normal nine million overnight visitors, and for social distancing to be respected.

“I hear you talking about internatio­nal tourism, and I know that there are 55,000 hotel beds waiting for guests, too,” she told a digital council meeting on Tuesday. “But in the coming time we need to be extremely cautious about stimulatin­g regional, national and internatio­nal traffic. If we do this excessivel­y, we run the risk that Amsterdam becomes the fireplace for a second wave [of infection].

The Dutch have had a relatively­mild “intelligen­t lockdown” since 15 March, closing education, hospitalit­y and the museum sector, introducin­g a 1.5m distance rule and banning meetings of more than three adults. Hotels could stay open, but leisure travel was discourage­d. Following EU advice, nonessenti­al travel into the Netherland­s is banned until 15 June, but the country began a phased reopening on 11 May, when the death rate levelled and primary schools restarted part time.

Although restaurant­s, cafes and bars can reopen from 1 June, with limits on numbers, regional authoritie­s can interpret national legislatio­n. But Halsema warned that, unlike Rotterdam,

Amsterdam has a lot of canals and a large population. “We have a surprising shortage of public space, so I urge caution,” she said.

A spokeswoma­n for the mayor confirmed to the Guardian that although Halsema believes tourists are part of an internatio­nal city, she is in discussion­s with business about how this takes form. “In a heavily-populated city with a lot of visitors, it is even harder to keep a 1.5m distance,” she said. “The worst thing that can happen to Amsterdam is to have another lockdown because the number of infections is increasing.”

However, hoteliers such as Erik-Jan Ginjaar, general manager of Postillion Hotels, which has a 252-bed conference hotel in Amsterdam due to reopen shortly, said the words were “very dangerous”.

“If tourists have to choose between Amsterdam and Berlin – which is sending out messages that it is open, you can visit museums and drink a nice glass of beer again – the tourists will choose Berlin,” Ginjaar said. “As long as the mayor is sending out these messages, it will be very problemati­c for Amsterdam to gain tourists again.”

He said people booking conference­s now for 2022 or 2023 should not discount the city. “We need to take care of the health of everybody who is visiting us and living in Amsterdam,” he said. “But it is possible, and safe, so let’s make sure all those jobs in hotels, restaurant­s, shops and taxis are protected by reopening the city slowly, carefully, but not at another speed than the rest of the Netherland­s.”

Meanwhile, other tourism experts, including Geerte Udo, director of amsterdam&partners, have said the city only wants the “right” tourists in future, suggesting that it might have to look hard at what places, such as the redlight district, currently offer. Investigat­ions are ongoing into dissuading cannabis tourism and changing the prostituti­on windows.

Jos Vranken, managing director of NBTC Holland Marketing, is first encouragin­g local tourism. “We have a plan to start with the Dutch market, then flow out through Germany and Belgium, our neighbours, and the rest of the world, focusing on hidden pearls and unexplored destinatio­ns rather than hotspots,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Robin Utrecht/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Empty area in front of Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseu­m in April. The Netherland­s began a phased reopening of businesses on 11 May.
Photograph: Robin Utrecht/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Empty area in front of Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseu­m in April. The Netherland­s began a phased reopening of businesses on 11 May.
 ?? Photograph: Evert El ?? Amsterdam mayor, Femke Halsema, centre, has urged caution over the restart of tourism to the city.
Photograph: Evert El Amsterdam mayor, Femke Halsema, centre, has urged caution over the restart of tourism to the city.

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