Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Tourists desert Egypt as protests rage


CAIRO: By Giza's Great Pyramids, souvenir vendors wait restlessly in the shade, watching for the handful of tourists who still make their way down the empty street to the once-bustling landmark. The 2011 revolution that toppled dictator Hosni Mubarak dealt a severe blow to the country's tourist industry, once a mainstay of Egypt's economy. And things have gone from bad to worse since June, when violent protests broke out against president Mohamed Morsi. On July 3, the army ousted the Islamist leader, leading to further deadly violence and an ongoing standoff between the two sides. The tour buses that lined the streets around the pyramids have disappeared. "We hope to the Lord that he will bring back those busy days, because all of us rely on tourism alone," said Gameel Hassan, who has run a shop near the pyramids selling papyrus prints for nearly 20 years. Now, his shop is empty. Only a few tourists come each day to browse the hundreds of pictures of Egyptian gods and pharoahs that cover the walls. "To bring tourism back, we need stability and security," he said. "The parties must calm down and leave the president to rule the country in the way he sees fit," he said, referring to the country's new interim authorities. Out in the street, Mahmoud Attiyah, who offers horseback tours of the pyramids, is glum about business. "There have been no tourists coming from outside. From June 30 until now, there have been none," he complained. But Morsi's removal cheered Attiyah. Like many of the vendors, he thought the Morsi government was harming Egypt's tourist industry, which once accounted for some 10 percent of GDP. Yet not everyone has been put off. Two travellers, laden by backpacks, made their was past the gate to the pyramids. They were followed by a crowd of jostling vendors offering souvenirs and horse rides. Ryan Gary and Ashley Westcott, from the US state of Colorado, were unfazed by the State Department's travel warnings about the country and alarming stories on the news. "As long as you travel safe and are smart about the kind of decisions that you are making, a lot of times the people are a lot nicer than the media makes them out to be," one said, beaming. But tourists like Westcott and Gary are increasingly rare. They have disappeared from the Khan el-Khalili bazaar in Cairo. This warren of narrow streets used to see coachloads of people coming to haggle over souvenirs, soak up the atmosphere and relax in cafes over a mint tea and a sheesha (water pipe). After dark, the area is crowded with Egyptians talking a stroll after the iftar meal to break the Ramadan fast, but the foreigners are nowhere to be seen. Hussam Manaf, 41, is a university professor in the mornings but, in the evenings, he runs the small Khan el-Khalili souvenir shop his father founded. Surrounded by hundreds of alabaster pyramids, glass ornaments and papyrus scrolls, Manaf said only one or two tourists had visited his shop each day since June 30. He was adamant that the tourism ministry needed to do more to promote Egypt abroad.