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Arab nations want to lure more Chinese visitors to help revive tourism sector battered by terror attacks

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Chinese tourists pose in front of the Giza pyramids in Egypt. Photo: EPA
Agence France-Presse

Arab nations are looking to Chinese visitors to revive their tourism sectors, battered by security fears, and also need to develop homegrown tourism as a lifeline, ministers from the region say.

Bookings to nations in North Africa and the Middle East, which had been recovering after the Arab spring unrest, fell last year following deadly attacks claimed by Islamic extremists in Tunisia and Egypt that caused foreigners to shun beaches and historic sites across the region.

But visitor numbers from China to Egypt soared last year despite a series of security blows to the country’s key tourism sector in 2015 because the government began to allow charter flights from the Asian country, Egyptian Tourism Minister Hisham Zaazou said.

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The number of Chinese visitors to Egypt more than doubled from 60,000 in 2014 to 135,000 in 2015, “in a year in which we suffered a lot”, he said at a conference on tourism policies in Arab nations at the Madrid international tourism fair Fitur, which wraps up Sunday.

In September eight Mexican tourists were mistakenly killed by Egyptian security forces in the vast Western Desert.

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A Russian investigator walks near wreckage after a passenger jet bound for St. Petersburg, crashed in Hassana, Egypt, on October 31, 2015 Islamic State claimed it bombed the aircraft. Photo: AP
A Russian investigator walks near wreckage after a passenger jet bound for St. Petersburg, crashed in Hassana, Egypt, on October 31, 2015 Islamic State claimed it bombed the aircraft. Photo: AP
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