The Macomb Daily

Asian tourism sees ups, downs in 2nd year of pandemic

- By The

From the Great Wall to the picturesqu­e Kashmir valley, Asia’s tourist destinatio­ns are looking to domestic visitors to get them through the COVID-19 pandemic’s second year.

With internatio­nal travel heavily restricted, foreign tourists can’t enter many countries and locals can’t get out. In the metropolis of Hong Kong, glamping and staycation­s have replaced trips abroad for at least some of its 7.4 million residents.

Across the Asia-Pacific region, internatio­nal tourist arrivals were down 95% in the first five months of the year, compared to the same period before the pandemic in 2019, according to the U.N. World Tourism Organizati­on.

New variants of the virus loom — a constant threat to any recovery in even domestic tourism. Warnings of a possible third wave in India worry Imraan Ali, whose houseboat on Kashmir’s Dal Lake is his only source of income.

“Since we are expecting a good influx of tourists, we don’t want that to be affected,” he said.

Tourists are returning to the valleys and mountains in Indian-controlled Kashmir, as infections in the Himalayan region and nationwide come down after a deadly second wave earlier this year.

The “shikaras,” or traditiona­l Kashmiri houseboats, are back on the calm waters of Dal Lake as Indians travel at home. India is reporting about 30,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day, down from a peak of 400,000 in May but still enough for many countries to restrict travelers from India.

 ?? MUKHTAR KHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Kashmiri boatman walks near anchored boats at Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir.
MUKHTAR KHAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A Kashmiri boatman walks near anchored boats at Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir.

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