Domestic tourists spent over SR28 billion in 2013
PRIME ATTRACTION: Amusement parks are a big attraction for families spending their vacations inside the Kingdom.
RIYADH: RASHID HASSAN
Published — Saturday 26 July 2014
Last update 26 July 2014 5:03 am
Domestic tourist spending reached more than SR28 billion last year, according to MAS, the statistical arm of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and Antiquities (SCTA).
More than 23,000 domestic tourism trips were made in 2013 according to MAS, said Majed Al-Sheddi, director-general of information and partnership relations and official SCTA spokesman.
Al-Sheddi scotched rumors circulating in newspapers that said that around 14 million foreign tourists visited the Kingdom in a single year.
“This figure, quoted by Hamad Al-Sheikh, vice president of SCTA for marketing and programs, during the tourism information evening refers to the number of pilgrims who entered the Kingdom on Haj and Umrah visas, including pilgrims who come on short visit visas,” he said.
Others visitors come to the Kingdom for work or to attend conferences or exhibitions or for visiting relatives and the like, he added.
The SCTA has maintained that all its activities and programs are solely devoted to domestic tourists and that such a campaign has yet to include foreign tourists in its target audience.
“The SCTA persistently seeks to meet domestic tourist aspirations and provide visitors with a highly integrated tourism experience in a manner that suits the Kingdom’s status and name and displays its level of progress,” he said.
“Moreover, thousands of expatriates of different nationalities themselves constitute an important tourism market,” Al-Sheddi said.
Domestic tourists spent over SR28 billion in 2013 | Arab News — Saudi Arabia News, Middle East News, Opinion, Economy and more.
UNWTO lauds Saudi law to protect heritage
RIYADH: RASHID HASSAN
Published — Thursday 31 July 2014
Last update 31 July 2014 12:04 am
The United Nation’s World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) has applauded Saudi Arabia’s new monuments system, a legislation aimed at protecting national heritage and antiquities.
The Kingdom recently joined the selected league of countries to set up a system for the monuments and became one of the first Arab countries to set up a monuments system.
Welcoming the Kingdom’s new legislation to protect antiquities and heritage as well as to give the Saudi Commission for Tourism and Antiquities (SCTA) the mandate to ensure its preservation, UNWTO in a statement said: “Heritage conservation is fundamental to safeguard cultural legacy and promote and preserve key tourism assets, which are central to differentiating destinations all around the world.”
Applauding the issuance of the new system of monuments, museums and architectural heritage, which was issued by the Saudi Council of Ministers recently, Taleb Rifai, UNWTO secretary general, congratulated the Kingdom for adopting legal mechanisms for the protection of its historical sites and contributing to ensure that tourism and culture continue to develop for the benefit of both.
“Cultural tourism — the movement of travelers motivated by the mosaic of art forms, heritage sites, festivals, traditions, and pilgrimages — is growing at an unprecedented rate. These are positives as the nexus between culture and tourism translates into important income generation for destinations but also for conservation,” he said.
“Nonetheless, such growth needs to be managed in a responsible and sustainable manner through adequate public policies and legislation,” he added.
Notably, this legislation on antiquities and national heritage coincided with the recent inclusion of the Jeddah historic area in the UNESCO world heritage site list, recognizing the old city’s cultural value and unique model with its distinguished urban heritage.
According to SCTA, the new monuments system will enhance protection of national heritage sites as resources for economic benefit and equally important in light of the evolution of interest and increased care of urban heritage of the Kingdom, whether architectural heritage or museums, to develop a system of monuments and primarily focus on the importance of awareness of monuments.
This system has been successfully applied in the past with the ministry of petroleum and did not affect in any way the ongoing developmental work.
SCTA has developed mechanisms that enable them to respond to this system, all of which is to protect national heritage and it is going to work with the ministries of transport and municipal affairs, petroleum and agriculture.
UNWTO lauds Saudi law to protect heritage | Arab News — Saudi Arabia News, Middle East News, Opinion, Economy and more.