Tsunami-hit countries see an end to their lingering tourism crisis

UK VISITORS and travellers as a whole are slowly but surely regaining their confidence to visit the countries hit by the tsunami.
A year later, countries affected by the December 26, 2004, disaster - Indonesia The Maldives, Sri Lanka and Thailand - are optimistic that at last
the crisis for their tourism industries is coming to an end.
The four countries - all popular as long haul holiday destinations from the UK - that were most affected by the disaster feel that a strong winter
season marked by high occupancy rates will finally put an end to the 'lingering crisis' that has dragged down arrivals and tourism revenues over
the past 12 months.
However, a World Tourism Organisation assessment of the post-tsunami recovery, indicates that hotel room capacity and air seat capacity to
Thailand's Andaman coast, Sri Lanka and the Maldives is still substantially lower than before the tragedy.
It concludes that a full recovery will not be possible until capacity is fully restored sometime this year (2006).
The WTO study is part of the Phuket Action Plan for the revival of tourism to the tsunami-affected countries, including Indonesia.
The plan was created at the special emergency meeting of the WTO Executive Council in Phuket last January. It laid the groundwork for an unprecedented series of nearly 40 tourism recovery projects that included activities such as fam trips, market research, communications initiatives, seminars, safety reviews, planning assistance and the organisation of the TOURCOM Regional Conference on Tourism Communications in Bali last May.
Recovery of tourist arrivals to beach resorts hit by the tsunami has been sluggish, says the WTO. The most recent official statistics show arrivals to
Phuket still down by 50 per cent in August, while October arrivals to the Maldives were still down by 23 per cent and foreign guest nights along Sri
Lanka's south coast were still down by 53 per cent in August But beach resorts in all three countries are reporting forward bookings for
December and January between 80-90 per cent. Diminished capacity is most evident in Thailand, on Phi Phi Island only 400 rooms are available compared to 2,000 before the tsunami and in hard-hit Khao Lak fewer than 500 of the 6,000 rooms have been reopened. Indonesia presents a different recovery curve.
As tourism facilities were not damaged in the tsunami that destroyed Banda Aceh, arrivals to Bali actually increased from March through September.
Terrorist attacks on October 1 drove tourism down once again by an estimated 37 per cent that month. But officials are hopeful that the recovery will be quicker than following the 2002 Bali bombings, due to stepped-up security and improved communications.
With the tsunmai one year anniversary just passed, WTO is appealing to the media to use the occasion to update the public on progress that has been made by the tourism industry over the past year - refurbished hotels, new tourism products and safety improvements.
The WTO is also asking the media to use restraint when showing pictures of last year's disaster, so that tourists will not be scared off for a second
time.
'Remember that the return of tourists to the tsunami-affected countries is the best way to help local communities recover from the tragedy,' said a WTO statement.

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