Islamist-ruled Egypt is open to visitors who drink alcohol and wear
bikinis as it sets out to boost numbers by at least a fifth this year,
the tourism minister said on Sunday.
Tourism is a pillar of the
Egyptian economy but has suffered since a popular uprising toppled
President Hosni Mubarak in 2011 and set off two years of periodic
rioting and instability.
The minister, Hisham Zaazou, said the
government had "optimistic goals" for the sector, and played down
comments from radical Salafi Muslim groups who have called for a ban on
alcohol and women wearing swimsuits.
"Bikinis are welcome in
Egypt and booze is still being served," Zaazou, speaking in English,
told a news conference during a visit to the United Arab Emirates.
"We
had talks with these Salafi groups and now they understand the
importance of the tourism sector, but still you have some individuals
that are not from the leadership saying these things," added the
minister, an independent who is not a member of the ruling Muslim
Brotherhood.
Islamist President Mohamed Morsi's government
increased taxes on alcohol in December but backed down after the move
was criticized by the tourism sector and by liberals.
Before the
uprising, tourism was worth more than a tenth of Egypt's economic
output. In 2010, 14.7 million visitors came, generating $12.5 billion in
earnings, but arrivals slowed to 9.8 million the following year and
income to $8.8 billion.
According to Zaazou, 2012 saw a recovery
as 11.5 million tourists came and revenues rebounded to about $10
billion. In the first quarter of 2013 about 3 million tourists visited, a
14.6% rise from the same period last year, he said.
Egypt's long term target was to reach 30 million tourists and revenues of $25 billion by 2022.
Zaazou
said rebuilding tourism was a national priority. To help meet the goal
of increasing visitor numbers by 20% this year, his ministry has
installed cameras in major resorts which feed live video onto its
website.
"We want to show people that Egypt is safe, and the best
way to show this is by live streaming. The next step will be to have
these images shown on big screens in public squares in Paris or New
York."
Seeking a way into new markets, Egypt tried to open its
doors to Iranian tourists this year after 34 years of frozen diplomatic
relations. But the move ran into protests from hardline Sunni Islamists
in Cairo who accused Iran of trying to spread the Shiite faith, leading
to the halting of all commercial flights from Iran in April.
"This
is just a temporary halt, tourism will resume again and we are
currently in talks with these groups who objected," said Zaazou, who
said he hoped the issue would be resolved within two weeks.
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4376450,00.html
Sunday, 5 May 2013
"Muslim" Brotherhood: Booze, Shekels and bikinis are welcome in Egypt
Posted @ 14:34
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