Saturday, January 2, 2016

Russians Find Favored Holiday Destinations Suddenly Off Limits

Russians flocked to Egypt's Red Sea resorts, like the one shown here in Sharm el-Sheikh on Nov. 7. But after a Russian plane was blown up, Russians have been barred from going. Russian tourists have also stopped going to Turkey, which recently shot down a Russian military plane.i

Russians flocked to Egypt's Red Sea resorts, like the one shown here in Sharm el-Sheikh on Nov. 7. But after a Russian plane was blown up, Russians have been barred from going. Russian tourists have also stopped going to Turkey, which recently shot down a Russian military plane. Ahmed Abd El-Latif/AP hide caption

toggle caption Ahmed Abd El-Latif/AP Russians flocked to Egypt's Red Sea resorts, like the one shown here in Sharm el-Sheikh on Nov. 7. But after a Russian plane was blown up, Russians have been barred from going. Russian tourists have also stopped going to Turkey, which recently shot down a Russian military plane.

Russians flocked to Egypt's Red Sea resorts, like the one shown here in Sharm el-Sheikh on Nov. 7. But after a Russian plane was blown up, Russians have been barred from going. Russian tourists have also stopped going to Turkey, which recently shot down a Russian military plane.

Ahmed Abd El-Latif/AP

Russians became enthusiastic travelers after the Soviet Union broke up, and two of their most cherished winter getaways were the sunny resorts of Egypt and Turkey.

But those countries are now off-limits, and Russia's sagging economy and sinking currency are also keeping many at home.

Just a year ago, ads for vacation travel packages were everywhere on Russian television.

Antalya, on Turkey's Mediterranean coast, was a favorite spot for Russian tourists, with warm, sandy beaches of a kind that are hard to find in Russia.

Czar Nicholas II is shown with his family in the 1910s. All were executed shortly after the 1917 Russian Revolution. Remains of the czar, his wife, Alexandra (top right) and their children — Olga (from left), Maria, Anastasia, Alexei and Tatiana — have all been identified. Now the Russian Orthodox Church has ordered new DNA tests to confirm the identities of Maria and Alexei. Parallels Will DNA Tests Finally Settle Controversy Surrounding Russia's Last Czars?

But after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane near the Turkey-Syria border in November, Russia banned tourists from traveling there.

Travel to Egypt was also banned, after terrorists blew up a Russian jetliner bringing tourists home from holidays on the Red Sea. The Islamic State has claimed responsibility in that case.

That was a heavy blow for travel agencies, since nearly 3 million Russians visited Egypt just last year, says Andrey Gavrilov, president of the Alliance of Tour Agencies, an industry lobby group.

"Travel agencies tried to suggest different destinations, like [the United] Arab Emirates, like Israel, and other countries," he says.

Russian tourists also looked to resorts further afield, in Southeast Asia, such as Cambodia and Thailand, he adds.

The two sides of a new 100-ruble banknote depict a memorial to sunken ships in the port of Sevastopol, the site of Russia's naval base, and the Swallow's Nest, a mock castle on a clifftop near Yalta. Parallels Russia Marks Crimea Annexation With A Banknote Rapidly Losing Value

"But for a shorter period of time and maybe a different category of hotels, I mean, four stars instead of five stars, in order to be closer to their budgets," he notes.

The devalued ruble, he says, has raised the cost of overseas travel by more than 30 percent. That makes domestic travel a lot more attractive.

Staying Closer To Home

I went to Moscow's Domodedovo Airport to see where Russians are going to spend their New Year holidays, when much of the country shuts down for more than a week.

A couple of young men with snowboards were checking in for a flight to Sochi, in southern Russia.

Alexander Vasiliyev, 29, said they planned to spend New Year's with friends at the new ski resort built for the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Vasiliyev says they would have gone to Europe, but there's not much snow this year, so Sochi is just as good and, he says, much cheaper.

Older Russians relax during a rally in Moscow. Even with steady improvements in life expectancy, Russian men — whose life expectancy was about 56 years in 1995 — today have an average life span of just under 66 years. Men in Europe live on average 10 years longer. Parallels A Post-Soviet Baby Bust Comes Back To Bite Russia

His buddy Anton Chernoyarov, 28, said they wouldn't go to Turkey on principle; they're patriots and the Turks shot down their plane.

Anna Kravchenko and Denis Belov were traveling on business, but said they're thinking about where to spend their holidays.

"England or Europe," says Belov.

"But it depends on the situation next year," adds Kravchenko.

She's 32 and a homemaker. He's a realtor, age 44.

Turkey and Egypt are not great losses to them, because they've visited each several times.

They've been to Europe, too, during their student days, but they're feeling a certain urgency about going back.

"Europe is changing now, and we don't know how it will be in five years, 10 years," Belov says. "I think Europe will change extremely."

Kravchenko says that's because "we have heard from the friends that the German cities, for example, Frankfurt, it's changing because of people with another culture."

What they're saying reflects what Russians are hearing on state-run television — that Europe is being degraded by the arrival of Muslim refugees.

The official line promoted by Russia's tourism chief, Oleg Safonov, is that foreign beach vacations are alien to Russian tradition.

His assertion proved embarrassing when it emerged that Safonov himself had owned two houses in the Seychelles Islands, a sunny paradise in the Indian Ocean.


Source: Russians Find Favored Holiday Destinations Suddenly Off Limits

No comments:

Post a Comment