You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Africa North
Egyptians Struggle as Wary Tourists Stay Away
2013-04-03
Yet another opportunity for Cause and Effect to meet up at a bar, have a beer, break bottles and slash at each other...
AL-BAIRAT, Egypt — Many of this country’s post-uprising troubles wash up here, in a crumbling shack on a dirty canal, where 13 members of the Abdul Latif family have long relied on tourism to keep them from slipping from poverty into ruin.

Adel Abdul Latif supported his family making the Pharaonic alabaster figurines that vendors hawk at the temples around Luxor. He also worked in construction, which depended on the prosperity of the local hoteliers and other businesspeople who hired him.

Then the tourists stopped coming.
It is indeed hard to know where to vacation these days. Cairo, where you can be molested or murdered, Yemen, where you can be kidnapped or murdered, Pakistan, where you can be kidnapped, then molested, then murdered, or Nigeria, where you will just be murdered? But it’s quaint that, months after American tourists figured out that it was perhaps better to look at the pyramids in photographs rather than in hot air balloons, the New York Times has figured out that Egypt is — wait for it — unsafe.

IÂ’m just surprised that the Childress twins arenÂ’t blaming all this on white men.
This winter there was so little work — during what had been the high season for tourism in Luxor — that the family had to rely on cash handouts and free blankets from a local charity staggering from its own financial woes.

For Egyptians taking nervous note of the country’s mounting calamities, with security ebbing and prices rising, the sustained drop-off in tourism has been especially alarming. Tourism provides direct jobs for nearly three million people, critical income to more than 70 industries and 20 percent of the state’s foreign currency — now desperately needed to prop up the plummeting Egyptian pound.

The changes to EgyptÂ’s complexion have been just as startling, as coveted tourism destinations have become bargain stops, celebrated temples have emptied and residents have directed their anger at the capital, Cairo, the site of the interminable political squabbles and street violence that have kept the tourists away.

“We are the ones that suffer,” said Ezzat Saad, the governor of Luxor, where in better times tourists relax on Nile cruises or stroll through the Great Hypostyle Hall at the nearby Temple of Karnak. These days, on the streets below the governor’s office, idle workers spend much of their time talking about the failings of the government. “Whatever I do on the local level,” Mr. Saad said, “whatever the minister of tourism does, it has a ceiling. We will never get back what was without political stability or security.”

Tourism plummeted in 2011 with the fall of President Hosni Mubarak and the unrest that followed. Some tourists have started to return, but officials say they are mostly beachgoers rather than the more lucrative cultural tourists who spend 10 days or more in Egypt, and spend accordingly during once-in-a-lifetime vacations.

Every headline about a riot in Egypt deepens the crisis. Cairo has been the hardest hit, with hotel occupancy falling to below 15 percent or worse in parts of the city closest to protests, according to Hani el-Shaer of the Egyptian Hotel Association. From Cairo, the hardship ripples across the country, affecting taxi and horse carriage drivers, boat operators, tour guides and store vendors.

“If something goes wrong in Cairo, tourists cancel the whole trip,” said Hisham Zaazou, Egypt’s minister of tourism.
Can't imagine why. Can you?
Officials have thrown up their hands at a problem that no amount of salesmanship seems able to fix.
That's because they're thinking of it as a sales problem rather than a problem of personal liberty, democracy, political discourse and rule of law...
They have already been forced to abandon the grand marketing campaigns of the past; there is little money for advertisements, and in any case, a slick television commercial for Egypt would be useless, if followed by a news report on the latest bloodshed, officials said.
Fox News in particular would delight in ordering the broadcast that way...
“The perception is that they’re not welcome,” Mr. Zaazou said. “That the Egyptian people are hostile. I need to change this.”
You're going to change your people? Good luck, sir, and have someone else start your car every morning...
So the countryÂ’s promoters are focusing on what they say are inflated fears about EgyptÂ’s safety,
What's the inflated part? The rapes, the riots or the hot air balloon crashes?
which they are countering with a limited effort to portray “the reality,” Mr. Zaazou said. One plan is to stream live video of Egypt over the Internet — of beaches and tourist attractions like the Egyptian Museum — to show that all is well in many of Egypt’s most treasured spaces.
Many of the spaces, yes indeed, that's a ringing endorsement isn't it...
It is an approach that Mexico has tried as well in its effort to draw attention to the distances, sometimes vast and sometimes not, between a prime beach or plaza and headline-grabbing, drug-related slaughter.

“We want to give assurances that Egypt is not just a square four million kilometer where there are disturbances,” said Nasser Hamdy, the head of the Egyptian Tourism Authority.

Officials also are pushing to attract tourists from new markets, to replace the American and other visitors sitting out the current crisis. The government has focused on India, and especially Iran, whose relationship with Egypt has started to warm after decades of official animosity.
Tourists. Iranian tourists. Heavily-armed, Iranian tourists...
But even that effort has been troubled by politics: a few days ago, the arrival of the first planeload of Iranian tourists brought a fevered response from ultraconservative Sunni Islamists, who promised new efforts to warn Egyptians about what they called the “dangers” of Shiite Islam.

For now, Luxor feels like a ghost town, haunted by the trappings of its glamorous past. Cruise ships are idle and moored together in bunches along the Nile. On the Corniche promenade, horse carriage drivers scuffle among themselves over the few tourists who emerge from the grand Winter Palace Hotel, its gardens and restaurants splendid — but deserted.

A proprietor at Gaddis & Co., a souvenir shop below the hotel that opened in 1907, called this the most sustained tourism crisis in Luxor since the period between EgyptÂ’s last wars with Israel in 1967 and 1973. Even after militants killed 60 tourists in 1997 at the Temple of Queen Hatshepsut, visitors stayed away for only a few months, said Badawy Fikri, a guard who works at the temple.

Before the uprising, he said, “I wouldn’t recognize a friend in the crowds.”

On a recent Sunday, only a trickle of visitors walked through the temple’s colonnaded terraces. Ahmed Allam, a frustrated tour guide, said Egypt needed to “think outside the box,” searching, as many do, for novel ways to make Egypt desirable again. He noted that ancient Egypt had lost its most tireless promoter, the flamboyant archaeologist Zahi Hawass, who was sidelined after the uprising because of legal troubles and his ties to the former government.

“We need to make it easier to film movies here,” Mr. Allam said. “We need celebrities.
You'd think this would be a project that the Ho'wood celebrities would be eager to endorse. Maybe you can't get an A-lister like Clooney, but a D-lister like Lindsay Lohan should be all over this like Lindsay Lohan all over [can't finish this sentence or I'll get Rantburg in trouble]...
Rock ’n’ roll bands. Weddings at the Pyramids. This will take years.”

There were no visitors at the nearby mortuary temple of Ramses II to see the fallen statue linked by legend to Ozymandias. A group of Egyptian schoolchildren had the Luxor museum largely to themselves, troubled only by a group of tour guides who strolled through — mostly, one of the guides said, because they had nothing better to do.

“I have colleagues who have tours every three or four months,” said Mohamed Aziz, who has worked as a guide for eight years and is on the verge of trying something else. “Lots of people are working without salaries. We have hopes and dreams. Reality is something else.”

By some estimates, up to 90 percent of people working in Luxor and the surrounding towns like Bairat were dependent on tourism, officials said. A local charity in Bairat that provided aid to poor families, orphans and disabled people said that many of its most important donors — like hotel and cruise boat owners — had stopped giving.

Abulatta Ibrahim, who sits on the board of the charity, said they had stopped construction on a community center that was to include a school, a manufacturing center for dressmakers and a clinic. “If we don’t have tourists,” he said, “we can’t do this.”
Posted by:Steve White

#8  Well, he did help build the pyramids donchyaknow?
Posted by: swksvolFF   2013-04-03 17:43  

#7   my fentoviolin

Thanks to the wonders of nanotechnology, we can now care less and less about larger and larger things.
Posted by: SteveS   2013-04-03 16:50  

#6  Well, you better give a shit because Obama's gonna make you pay for it.
Posted by: Ebbang Uluque6305   2013-04-03 15:55  

#5  I'll start searching for my fentoviolin as soon as I can gin up some giveashit.
Posted by: Barbara   2013-04-03 13:07  

#4  Let them eat sand.
Posted by: Ebbolung Gonque9360   2013-04-03 13:05  

#3  Inshalla.
Posted by: Hellfish   2013-04-03 12:04  

#2  IÂ’m just surprised that the Childress twins arenÂ’t blaming all this on white men

No, that was just unkind. The charming Childress twins won't notice that the Arab Spring is going as planned for another five years yet.
Posted by: trailing wife   2013-04-03 11:15  

#1  I'm just surprised that the Childress twins aren't blaming all this on white men.

Of course it's the White Man's fault. If we hadn't discovered those damn pyramids in the first place...
Posted by: SteveS   2013-04-03 10:58  

00:00