Thursday, July 26, 2007

DAR AL ISLAM - MOROCCO: MOSLEM TERRORISM HURTS TOURISM - - - WHAT A SURPRISE?!? NOT ! ! !

Moroccans say security fears hurting tourism


MARRAKESH: After three days sitting in a dusty clearing, Ibrahim is beginning to wonder if a European tourist will ever hire one of his camels for a tour of the rose-lined boulevards of Marrakesh. "The number of visitors has dwindled to nothing in the past week," said the 21-year-old Moroccan, his lips pale and dry in the summer heat.

I've been waiting for three days but not a single tourist has come for a ride. A tourism boom that transformed Marrakesh with hotels, apartments and golf courses seems to have paused, and some hotel managers and officials are blaming an increase in activity by Islamic militants. North Africa has been on alert since Al-Qaeda's affiliate in the region threatened to escalate its war against "corrupt" regional rulers and their Western allies.

In March and April in the coastal city of Casablanca, seven suicide bombers detonated devices, two outside US diplomatic buildings, killing all the bombers and one policeman. "The flow of tourists has been shrinking and the authorities refuse to make the numbers public," said a Marrakesh government official who did not want to be named. "The incidents in Casablanca in April were another factor in the trend of falling tourist arrivals because it tainted the image of Morocco." All that could spell problems for Morocco, once an off-beat destination for the adventurous that is now embracing the era of mass tourism.

Tourism has become Morocco's biggest source of foreign currency, helping offset big trade deficits. Its importance is likely to grow as the government seeks to boost visitor numbers to 10 million by 2010, up from 6.5 million last year. Open Sky agreements have allowed airlines to shuttle in millions of Europeans, who sunbathe around pools and shop for craftworks in the kingdom's bustling old towns or flock to a growing number of open-air festivals. Some economists warn there are risks in placing so much reliance on an industry whose chances could be threatened by security scares. The number of visitors to Marrakesh was up only 1 percent in May, well short of what will be needed to fill the hotels mushrooming across the city and reach the 2010 target. Recent bookings suggest a drop of between 17 percent and 50 percent in occupancy at 24 hotels with four or five stars, according to an official who asked to remain anonymous.


...




Pertinent Links:

1) Moroccans say security fears hurting tourism

No comments: