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The North African country reopened its borders to tour operators in late April but then ordered a new week-long partial lockdown at the start of May because of a spike in coronavirus cases.
Up to 10 flights a week, mostly from
and eastern Europe, have in the past month been touching down at Enfidha, an airport serving Tunisia’s tourism towns.
But revenues are down more than 60 per cent on 2019, before the pandemic hit.
Hotels are authorised to operate at 50 per cent of capacity but are struggling to reach that level.
“There’s not much profit with just 30 per cent hotel occupancy,” lamented Adel Mlayah, deputy director of the high-end Mouradi Palace in Sousse.
The hotel normally employs at least 260 staff, but this year no more than 120 are working.
Eastern Europe also came to the rescue after the 2015 jihadist attacks on the capital’s Bardo Museum and in Sousse that killed 60 people, all but one of them tourists, bringing the crucial sector of Tunisia’s economy to its knees.
While visitors from most Western countries are deterred from travel by their governments, those from Russia, the Czech Republic and Poland appeared to have few such qualms.
We had Covid two months ago, so we’re not scared
“There are not that many countries where we can go,” said Andrej Radiokove, newly arrived from Moscow. “Turkey closed its borders – that’s why we chose Tunisia.”
Like most of the others in his tour group, he has not been vaccinated. “We had Covid two months ago, so we’re not scared,” he said.
Only around 2 per cent of Tunisia’s population has so far been vaccinated.
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The pandemic has claimed more than 12,000 lives in the country of 12 million people. But the high local toll does not appear to have deterred the sun-seekers.
Around the pool of the Mouradi Palace, a clutch of them swayed to the rhythm of Russian electronic music.
“Customers from eastern Europe are less than reticent, less concerned about the pandemic,” said Zied Maghrebi, marketing director of the nearby Movenpick hotel. “We have fallen back on these customers because they’re not afraid to travel.”
Serafim Stoynovski, a 22-year-old Bulgarian law student, explained that he chose Tunisia because “restrictions here are not as strict” as in other countries.
“We can go out for a walk, go to a restaurant or have a coffee if we want,” he said.
Unlike other tourists who have to self-isolate for five to seven days in government-assigned hotels at their own expense, those in tour groups only need a negative PCR test.
Excursions, however, are restricted to tours organised by travel agents who adhere to health protocols, said Sousse tourism commissioner Taoufik Gaied.
He is holding out hope for 1 million tourists in 2021, still just a fraction of the 9 million who came two years ago.
A decade since its 2011 revolution, Tunisia’s economic woes have been compounded by the coronavirus pandemic and lockdown measures.
The International Monetary Fund expects the country’s economy will grow 3.8 per cent this year, making up little of the ground lost by an unprecedented 8.9 per cent contraction in 2020.
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