Gulf Arab states
will scrap by the end of the month a travel warning for citizens
thinking of visiting Lebanon, in a sign of improving relations with the
new Lebanese government, its tourism minister said on Wednesday. The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) - Saudi Arabia,
Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates - once
provided the bulk of Lebanon's tourism revenue but last June warned
citizens against visiting as Syria's civil war fuelled sectarian
violence in its smaller neighbor. "Unofficially
it has been lifted. When people talk to the authorities they tell them:
'You can go to Lebanon'," Lebanese Tourism Minister Michel Pharaon told
Reuters in a telephone interview. "Now we're waiting for the (official) green light. We see this will be before the end of the month." Lifting
the travel advisory comes as Lebanon's new government, formed in
February after 10 months of political deadlock, beds in. The
Sunni Muslim-ruled GCC countries viewed the previous government of
Prime Minister Najib Mikati, which was formed in 2011 and remained in
office in a caretaker capacity after his resignation in March 2013, as a
creation of their foe, the Shi'ite group Hezbollah. "Because
of some misunderstanding with the (former) government and some
deterioration (in relations) they avoided coming to Lebanon last year,"
said Pharaon. "The
government is really tight on security, with strong international
support for stability in Lebanon. This is new, so they're observing and
making sure this is something which is holding." Tourism and related industries account for a fifth of Lebanon's economy
and employ about 250,000 people, Pharaon said, but the number of
foreign visitors fell to 1.3 million last year from 2.3 million in 2010,
the last summer before the start of an insurrection against Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. "The
crisis we went through was very costly and damaging but we still have
all the touristic assets and we think we can revive them," Pharaon told a
news conference, adding that Lebanon aimed to host 1.8 million tourists
this year. Political
tensions in Lebanon remain, and its parliament is in stalemate over who
should be the next president after President Michel Suleiman's term
expires in less than three weeks.
Lebanon expects Gulf Arabs to end travel warning this month
Reuters
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