(Reuters) - The
European visitors strolling Tunisia's Hammamet resort are an encouraging
sign for a government determined to minimize the fallout of last week's
shooting of 20 tourists in the nearby capital. But there is anxiety
about the future in the five-star hotels, trinket shops and restaurants
in the town, where horse-drawn carts trot calmly in the Mediterranean
sun. Japanese, Spanish,
Italian and Colombian tourists were among the victims when at least two
gunmen opened fire on their buses as they arrived at the Tunis Bardo
Museum, which houses some of the Roman artifacts that are one of
Tunisia's major draws. Tourism
minister Salma Loumi said the impact from the attack appeared limited
so far, with a few cancellations but words of encouragement from travel
agency and tour company partners for the north African country's mostly
package-holiday bookings. Six
million tourists, mostly Europeans, hit Tunisia's yellow sand beaches,
desert treks and medina souks last year, providing seven percent of its
gross domestic product, most of its foreign currency revenues and more
jobs than anything but farming. The attackers clearly aimed to cut this lifeline. "They wanted to hit us through our economic backbone," Loumi told Reuters. "But they won't succeed." Her
ministry's figures show visitors numbers have yet to catch up with the
years before the Arab Spring uprising that toppled Zine El-Abidine Ben
Ali and ushered in an uncertain period of political transition. Now
that democracy and political compromise have emerged, the country hopes
to revive economic growth and is counting on attractions like its
Carthage Roman ruins and the great mosque of Kairouan, part of a UNESCO
heritage site. In the
south, tourists also visit Tataouine, the desert town made famous for
scenes filmed for the Star Wars movies, and the island of Djerba for
beaches like those in Hammamet. "If the tourists don't come, then we'll start worrying," said Hammamet shop owner Shukri Barhoumi. "So
far we're not seeing any consequences, tourists don't seem to be
worried ... But it's not the season yet, maybe we'll see the impact in a
few weeks." DISCREET SECURITY President
Beji Caid Essebsi has ordered the army to protect major cities and more
than 20 people have been arrested since the attack. Security forces at the scene shot dead two gunmen who they said had been trained by jihadis in neighboring Libya, where chaos has allowed Islamic State affiliates to grow. But another is still on the loose and some of more than 3,000 Tunisians to join Islamist militant groups in Iraq and Syria have returned home, raising fears of more attacks. After
Wednesday's Bardo assault, several tour companies suspended some
services to Tunis, notably the cruise ship owners who, shaken by the
deaths of some of their passengers in the attacks, said they would
bypass the city for the time being. An
initial study by the finance ministry estimated that losses for the
industry may reach $700 million, compared with annual revenues from
tourism in 2014 of close to $2 billion. Civilian
police have discreetly increased their presence on the palm-fringed
boulevards of Hammamet, where only a small police checkpoint is visible.
But some visitors said tour operators had suspended trips to Roman
ruins and desert treks. "We
have had some cancellations, which is understandable," said Marouen
Kilani, a director for Spanish firm RIU Club Marco Polo. "For the summer
high season we're still at full occupancy." Militants
have targeted the tourism industry before. An al Qaeda suicide bomber
killed 21 people in 2002 in the southern island of Djerba. In 2013,
another bomber blew himself up on the beach in Sousse. No one else was
killed. "We still think
it's the most stable place in North Africa," said retired Scottish
chemist Charlie Welsh who was on a repeat visit to Tunisia. "It is not going to stop us going on holiday."
In Tunisia's tourist heartland, anxious wait after attack

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