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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Mahmoud Mourad & Jon Hebditch

Scots tourists handed holiday boost as Egypt prepares to reopen resorts

Scots sunseekers have been handed a holiday boost as Egypt prepares to reopen its major resorts to tourists

The country will reopen main seaside resorts and all airports on July 1 after suspending international flights in March amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Holiday mainstays like Spain and Portugal are desperate to welcome visitors to boost their vital tourism sectors.

Major resorts like Bennidorm are beginning to open up again with Spanish government restrictions to ease from Monday allowing up to 75% capacity in bars and restaurants.

The country is looking to reopen to tourists (AFP via Getty Images)

And Egypt also wants to make sure it can capitalise on returning tourists, with workers disinfecting sites like the pyramids. 

Aviation minister Mohamed Manar Anba told a news conference that flights would resume gradually at the airports from the start of July.

He said foreign tourism would be limited to resorts in three coastal provinces, after the government said on Thursday it would reopen Egypt's main seaside resorts for international flights and foreign tourists from July 1.

Egyptian State Minister of Media and Information Osama Heikal (C) speaks during a press conference with Minister of Civil Aviation Mohamed Manar (L) and Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Khaled al-Anani (AFP via Getty Images)

Anba and Tourism Minister Khaled al-Anani, who joined the news conference, outlined measures to be taken inside planes, at airports and in hotels to help to ensure the safety and health of foreign tourists.

Travellers from countries with high rates of coronavirus infections, based on World Health Organization (WHO) assessments, need to be tested before coming to Egypt, the ministers said.

An estimated 415,000 British nationals visited Egypt in 2018 according to the foreign office.

The pandemic has shuttered Egypt's tourist industry, which the government says accounts for 5% of economic output but which analysts say may account for as much as 15% if jobs and investment indirectly related to the industry are included.

Egypt, a nation of about 100 million people, has registered 42,980 cases of the virus and 1,484 deaths. The number is lower than many European countries but cases have climbed in the past three weeks.

 
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