Sri Lanka woos tourists from Gulf
Sri Lanka is aiming for a 20 per cent increase in international
tourist arrivals in 2008 led by visitors from the UAE and other Middle
Eastern countries, Deputy Tourism Minister Faiszer Musthapha said.
There were around 30,000 visitors, including expatriates, from the
Middle East countries to the island last year, Musthapha told Gulf News
in an interview.
“We are focusing on the high potential of the Middle East market as
this is one market where we have done little or no marketing. Last year,
about 7,000 tourists came to Sri Lanka from the UAE. This year, we are
targeting more than 10,000 tourists from the UAE,” Musthapha said.
“The segment of tourist arrivals from the Middle East should grow by
at least 50 per cent this year,” he added.
He said the visitors from the Middle East generally come with
families and statistics show that they are bigger spenders and duration
of their stay is longer. “Their disposable income is higher and we want
such high-end visitors to our country,” said Musthapha. Some 500,000
foreign tourists visited Sri Lanka last year.
Tourism contributes about four per cent to Sri Lanka’s gross domestic
product (GDP) and the revenue generated from foreign tourists is a major
source of foreign exchange for the country. Since 1983, as many as five
million foreign tourists have visited Sri Lanka.
Musthapha said besides the Middle East, Sri Lanka is trying to woo
tourists from countries in Eastern Europe, Russia and Britain.
“We currently have more than 1,000 luxury rooms available across
Colombo, Kandy, Galle and Dambulla. There are going to be many more
soon, as boutique hotels are coming up in the country which will have
rooms and suites in the price range of $250-$1,000,” he said. -
Gulf News
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