Hit by pandemic closures, Israeli tourism professionals demand intervention

Industry workers warn of the collapse of tourism which is responsible for $6.5 billion annually and is the sixth-largest sector in national GDP; most tour guides are self-employed and do not receive any government aid

The Media Line|Updated:
Hundreds of tourism professionals gathered among the greenery of a park opposite the Knesset in Jerusalem on Thursday to demand a meeting with the incoming minister responsible for their sector.
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  • They warned that without government action, the industry will crumble due to coronavirus restrictions, including what are, in effect, closed borders.
    3 View gallery
    הפגנת ענף התיירות
    הפגנת ענף התיירות
    Tourism industry workers demonstrate outside the Knesset
    (Photo: Amit Shabi)
    The government has enforced strict directives in its fight against the pandemic, sealing off the country to outsiders unless they are willing to enter 14 days of quarantine immediately on arrival.
    As few, if any, visitors are willing to do this, the move has ravaged tourism, bringing the sector to a screeching halt, with projected losses topping $2.7 billion.
    3 View gallery
    הפגנת ענף התיירות
    הפגנת ענף התיירות
    Tourism industry workers demonstrate outside the Knesset calling for government assistance
    (Photo: Amit Shabi)
    Outbound tour operator Claire Balas said she has lost all of her clients for this year.
    “We are unemployed. The companies that we work for are unemployed,” she stated.
    “We are not getting any money from the government and we are all at a red line,” Balas continued. “This is our problem. We need help from the government, something to hold us together until the coronavirus is over.”
    Tour guides, who are self-employed, complain that the state does not provide them with unemployment benefits, as it does for others.
    Guide Ofir Malakai said it was time to reopen the borders and get back to work.
    “I have customers from Canada, Australia, the US, and more, who really want to come here,” he said. “A hospital manager in Canada tells me that if the borders were to open, he would come. People want to travel and see Israel.”
    Israel’s tourism industry was soaring in the past few years, with record-breaking numbers of tourists, bringing with them billions of dollars.
    Israel is gradually easing its coronavirus restrictions, allowing students to go back to school, shopping centers to reopen, and workers to get back to work. But so far, no date has been set for opening the borders to foreign tourists.
    3 View gallery
    פיילוט חזרה לשגרה בנתב"ג
    פיילוט חזרה לשגרה בנתב"ג
    Ben Gurion Airport empty during coronavirus pandemic
    (Photo: Moti Kimchi)
    Ronnie Ariav, an outbound tour operator, says he has taken thousands of Israelis on tours abroad, but with the fear of contracting coronavirus, he’s not flying anywhere.
    “Our border and the other borders are closed, all over the world. I can’t take groups out of Israel. I am here without any work, with nothing,” he said.
    “There is nothing now,” he said. “There is no business at all.”
    Article written by Mohammad Al-Kassim. Reprinted with permission from The Media Line
    First published: 22:27, 05.14.20
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