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UN Tourism Body Head: Security Still Clouds Global Tourism Outlook


FILE - Tourists view the Statue of Liberty during a ferry ride to Liberty Island in New York, Nov. 5, 2015. A U.N. official predicts the U.S. will lose millions of dollars as tourists will shun the country due to the Trump administration's controversial immigration and travel restrictions.
FILE - Tourists view the Statue of Liberty during a ferry ride to Liberty Island in New York, Nov. 5, 2015. A U.N. official predicts the U.S. will lose millions of dollars as tourists will shun the country due to the Trump administration's controversial immigration and travel restrictions.

The United States stands to lose millions in tourism revenues by travelers who will shun the country because of its ban on the nationals of seven
Muslim-majority countries, the head of a United Nations tourism body said on Thursday.

Taleb Rifai, a Jordanian who is secretary-general of the United Nations World Tourism Organization, also said the ban was partly the result of Americans not being well-traveled.

"I completely believe our friends across the Atlantic are developing this isolation attitude because they are not international travelers," Rifai told Reuters in an interview in Athens.

"Sixty three percent of U.S. citizens don't even have a passport so why are we surprised.... If you travel, your eyes open, your mind opens, you become a better person," he said.

Rifai said global tourism was not expected to be affected by the ban. Tourists to the U.S. would simply pick another destination instead.

However, he said the U.S. had lost $185 million in one month since the ban was introduced, and stood to lose tens of millions each month if similar policies continued.

"Multiply that by 12 months - we are talking about a quarter of a billion [dollars] each month, which is tremendous."

The losses were not necessarily from the countries directly affected. "You don't want to go to places that you are not welcomed, why should you? Options are everywhere."

Rifai, whose term ends this year, praised Greece for its reception of more than 1 million refugees at the peak of the migration crisis in 2015.

Greece he said "was correct in receiving them ... by correct I mean abiding by international law. That's why you were not penalized by tourists," he said of the country, on its third international bailout since 2010.

Greek tourism revenues are seen rising by up to 9 percent in 2017. Arrivals have been rising for years, despite the hurdles.

"That tells you something," Rifai said adding that the attitude of receiving refugees while struggling with the debt crisis was 'admirable'. "I'm here to pay respect to that," he said.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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