Destinations struggling to attract
visitors after terrorist attacks will continue to see a fall in
international arrivals, flight reservations suggest.
Turkey will be hardest hit, with bookings for September to December expected to be down by 52% on the same period last year.
Bookings to France are down by nearly 20% over the same period.
Research also suggests Spain, Portugal and Italy are the favoured substitute destinations in southern Europe.
Travel data company Forward Keys analysed flight reservation data for Radio 4's
You and Yours programme.
Alternative destinations
During
the first seven months of this year, the available seats to Spain from
the UK increased by 19% compared with the same period a year earlier,
Germany increased by 12%, and Portugal increased by 12%.
Low cost carriers are the airlines most responsible for pushing up capacity.
You
and Yours listener Grace Finnigan, who has been on holiday to the
Algarve in Portugal, said: "There is a marked increase in the number of
people around this year. The traffic is horrendous and the restaurants
are heaving with people."
Darren Northfield, who is in Marbella in Spain, said: "It is much busier than it was two years ago when we last visited."
'Other routes'
The
series of terror attacks in France, starting with the Charlie Hebdo
shooting, triggered a decreasing trend in international arrivals there,
which was worsened by the Paris shootings in November 2015, according to
Forward Keys.
France has suffered an accumulated year-on-year
decrease of 5.4% between August 2015 and July 2016 and Paris suffered a
worse decline, down 7.5% over the same period.
Bookings to Turkey
were down by 15% between August 2015 and July 2016 compared with the
same period last year due to a series of terror attacks and July's
attempted coup d'etat.
Olivier Jager, from Forward Keys, said: "Travellers create a situation when they decide to visit alternative destinations.
"Operators and airlines decide to use their aircraft for other routes that allow them to fill their planes."
Tunisia starting to recover
International
arrivals into Tunisia fell by 39.4% between August 2014 and July 2015,
when a series of terror attacks - including on the beach in Sousse -
targeted tourism destinations in the country.
However, figures
from the Tunisian Tourist Board show that there has been an increase in
the number of visitors from Algeria and Russia.
Between July 2014
and July 2016 the number of Russian tourists visiting Tunisia has more
than doubled from 63,054 to 131,434. The number of Algerian tourists has
tripled from 65,000 in 2014 to 194,370 over the same period.
Tunisian hoteliers have slashed their prices to encourage these new tourists to holiday in the country.
Hichem
Driss, vice-president of the National Hoteliers Federation, told You
and Yours that hoteliers have cut prices from £45 a night to £25 per
night.
"Since the attacks hoteliers have lost the biggest part of their turnover which used to come from European customers," he said.
"We
now receive more visitors from North Africa, and Eastern Europe,
particularly Russia. They do not spend as much as the Europeans. We
offer them special offers because it's important to have a little
business to try and save jobs."
Tunisia is starting to recover.
Data collated by Forward Keys suggests international arrivals for the
coming quarter are up by 13% compared with the equivalent period last
year.
Mr Jager said: "We see a slight improvement in terms of
bookings, which have increased by 13% for the period September to
December.
"That's comparing demand last year with demand this
year and because demand last year was very weak 13% is not great.
However, it is going up, so there is hope for Tunisian destinations."
SOURCE:
BBC NEWS
COMMENT AND SHARE.............................................................
Comments
Post a Comment
Welcome.......
What are you thinking of....!!