TAAI Congress boosts Sri Lanka’s tourism | Sunday Observer

TAAI Congress boosts Sri Lanka’s tourism

9 July, 2023

Sri Lanka is counting on tourists from India, its primary source market, to boost foreign exchange earnings and aid economic recovery, as the island expects fewer tourists from Europe amid the ongoing recession.

Colombo is currently hosting the 67th Convention of the Travel Agents Association of India (TAAI) to further boost Indian tourist arrivals in the coming years.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe told participants on Thursday that tourism would emerge as Sri Lanka’s chief foreign exchange earning sector in the next decade.

Pitching a collaborative regional effort to promote tourism, he asked “Why don’t we make our whole BIMSTEC area one borderless tourist area?”, pointing to the scope in the region to showcase diverse sites and cuisines.

The tourism industry has brought in US$ 3.5 billion into the island until May this year, showing signs of bouncing back. Sri Lanka’s tourism sector took a big hit after the Easter Sunday terror attacks in April 2019. Before it could recover, it suffered successive blows such as the Covid-19 pandemic and last year’s financial meltdown.

Prior to that, in 2018, the sector’s foreign exchange earnings totalled US$ 4.3 billion, according to the Tourism Development Authority.

India has consistently topped Sri Lanka’s tourist arrival charts in recent years, including during the time of Covid-19 and later, during the island nation’s economic crisis. Last year, when Sri Lanka experienced its worst financial downturn since Independence — citizens suffered amid acute shortages of essentials and long power cuts — that triggered a mass anti-Government uprising, authorities recorded 24 percent of the total arrivals from India, followed by Russia and the United Kingdom.

In the wake of global recession, India and China are “low hanging fruits”, Sri Lanka Tourism Promotion Bureau chairman Chalaka Gajabahu earlier told reporters. “The focus on India and strategic partnerships between the two countries is, therefore, vital in ensuring a successful recovery for Sri Lanka’s tourism industry,” he said.

Earlier this week, Air China restored its service between Colombo and Chengdu, in China’s Sichuan Province, with three weekly flights. Sri Lanka Tourism welcomed the first batch of Chinese tourists for the year in March, after a gap of three years since the pandemic.

Indian state-owned Alliance Air introduced daily direct flights between Chennai and Jaffna, in Northern Sri Lanka.

Launched in 2019 the Jaffna-Chennai flight, currently operated thrice a week using ATR 72-600 aircraft, was suspended during the Covid-19 pandemic. The service resumed in December last year, and has since witnessed a surge in demand.

- The Hindu

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