Inside the walls of the medina market, a top draw in Tunisia’s Hammamet seaside resort, Hafedh Alouini arranges his shop in hopes of a customer.
“I haven’t made a sale in nearly three weeks,” he says, as a handful of other souk sellers lean against the stone walls of the medina, smoking cigarettes and soaking up sun. “There are no tourists. We’re just waiting.”
Tunisia’s tourism industry, the North African country’s top foreign currency earner, has ground to a halt since a popular uprising last month forced President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali to flee and touched off further revolts through the Arab world.
Thousands of tourists were evacuated from resort towns as protests reached a head, gutting the tourism sector by 40 percent in January and leading the government to launch an advertising campaign to draw people back, dubbed, “I love Tunisia, the place to be … now!”
The drop-off is no small problem for Tunisia — long a darling vacation destination thanks to its 1,410 kilometers of Mediterranean coastline, its ancient Roman architecture and vast picturesque desert.
Tourism employs roughly 400,000 of the country’s 10 million people, and brought in nearly $2.5 billion last year — more than 6 percent of its gross national product.
But as Tunisia struggles to find its footing — with sporadic protests choking the capital and the interim government wrestling with a surge in crime — the question now is, “Will they return?”
Tunisia’s peak tourist months run from April to July. The government is hopeful, and says charter flights from Europe started to resume over the weekend to the scenic seaside town of Bizerte.
Earlier this month, Tourism Minister Mehdi Houass said the popular overthrow of Ben Ali was “a good promotion” that could turn out to be good for the sector. “The revolution has made our country known to the whole world,” he said. “We want to tell all our friends that they can come to Tunisia in a atmosphere of peace and freedom.”
But ongoing demonstrations and worries about rising religious tension could be a setback, as could violence unfolding elsewhere in the Arab world, including in neighboring Libya, where scores of protesters have been shot dead.
“Security is everything,” said Kate Davis, director of the Saphir Palace hotel in Hammamet — one of more than a dozen big hotels on the edge of the sea, but among just a few still operating.
“For people who are not here to see that it is calm and beautiful, the news about what is going on around the Arab world may be discouraging,” she said. “On the other hand, I’m very optimistic that tourism will return in the coming months.”
At the nearby Chich Khan hotel, German tourist Susie Voege was checking in with her husband. “The security is fine, and we have this place to ourselves,” she said.
Dozens of other hotels, however, stand empty.
Reuters
“I haven’t made a sale in nearly three weeks,” he says, as a handful of other souk sellers lean against the stone walls of the medina, smoking cigarettes and soaking up sun. “There are no tourists. We’re just waiting.”
Tunisia’s tourism industry, the North African country’s top foreign currency earner, has ground to a halt since a popular uprising last month forced President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali to flee and touched off further revolts through the Arab world.
Thousands of tourists were evacuated from resort towns as protests reached a head, gutting the tourism sector by 40 percent in January and leading the government to launch an advertising campaign to draw people back, dubbed, “I love Tunisia, the place to be … now!”
The drop-off is no small problem for Tunisia — long a darling vacation destination thanks to its 1,410 kilometers of Mediterranean coastline, its ancient Roman architecture and vast picturesque desert.
Tourism employs roughly 400,000 of the country’s 10 million people, and brought in nearly $2.5 billion last year — more than 6 percent of its gross national product.
But as Tunisia struggles to find its footing — with sporadic protests choking the capital and the interim government wrestling with a surge in crime — the question now is, “Will they return?”
Tunisia’s peak tourist months run from April to July. The government is hopeful, and says charter flights from Europe started to resume over the weekend to the scenic seaside town of Bizerte.
Earlier this month, Tourism Minister Mehdi Houass said the popular overthrow of Ben Ali was “a good promotion” that could turn out to be good for the sector. “The revolution has made our country known to the whole world,” he said. “We want to tell all our friends that they can come to Tunisia in a atmosphere of peace and freedom.”
But ongoing demonstrations and worries about rising religious tension could be a setback, as could violence unfolding elsewhere in the Arab world, including in neighboring Libya, where scores of protesters have been shot dead.
“Security is everything,” said Kate Davis, director of the Saphir Palace hotel in Hammamet — one of more than a dozen big hotels on the edge of the sea, but among just a few still operating.
“For people who are not here to see that it is calm and beautiful, the news about what is going on around the Arab world may be discouraging,” she said. “On the other hand, I’m very optimistic that tourism will return in the coming months.”
At the nearby Chich Khan hotel, German tourist Susie Voege was checking in with her husband. “The security is fine, and we have this place to ourselves,” she said.
Dozens of other hotels, however, stand empty.
Reuters





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