Sri Lanka hits tourism record

Saturday, 21 January 2017 02:44 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

AFP: Sri Lanka earned a record USD3.5 billion from tourism in 2016, seven years after the end of a devastating civil war, a Government Minister said.

But sources in the industry warned that the post-war boom could be short-lived as planned airport closures forced the cancellation of international flights.

Runway repairs are disrupting airline services at Colombo’s gateway airport with flight check-in scheduled five hours ahead of departures. The repairs will continue until late April.

Tourism on the Indian Ocean island suffered heavily during a decades-long civil war that ended in 2009, but has been recovering in recent years.

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International tourists take a selfie on a beach in Colombo on 17 January, 2017. Tourists have flocked back to Sri Lanka’s shores since a bloody civil war ended in 2009 - LAKRUWAN WANNIARACHCHI / AFP

 



Tourism Minister John Amaratunga said Sri Lanka had 2.05 million arrivals in 2016, short of its target of 2.2 million but still the best the island has ever recorded.

The Minister said he hoped for a further rise in 2017, but industry figures warned tourism could fall by 30%, hit by the daytime closure of the Colombo international airport for three months for a runway upgrade.

“The drop will be because of the partial airport closure and (national carrier) SriLankan stopping direct flights to France and Germany,” a senior tourism official told AFP.

International airlines have reduced flights to Colombo during the runway repairs that are expected to continue until April.

The loss-making national carrier SriLankan has said it will lose USD50 million as a result of flight cancellations.

Tourists have long been attracted to Sri Lanka for its golden beaches, cultural sites and picturesque tea plantations.

Authorities say tourism has also been boosted by improvements in the island’s international reputation for human rights following the ousting two years ago of former president Mahinda Rajapakse, widely criticised for suppressing dissent.

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