http://www.antara.co.id/en/seenws/?id=22358

Islam at heart of Saudi Arabia's tourism drive

Mecca, Saudi Arabia (ANTARA News) - Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of 
Islam and home to its holiest shrines, hopes it can use its religious 
heritage to pull in not just pilgrims but tourists too, without 
compromising its way of life.

Officials are confident they can attract hundreds of thousands of 
high-end holidaymakers to visit the conservative Muslim country. And the 
holy city of Mecca, with its key Islamic sites and ancient markets, is 
central to the plan.

The Supreme Commission of Tourism (SCT) said earlier this year that 
tourist visas would be granted to foreigners for the first time. It 
licensed 18 tour operators to issue the visas, abolishing a 
long-standing requirement for a Saudi resident to
sponsor those wishing to enter the country.

But the desert kingdom, where Islam is the writ of law, does not plan to 
water down the central role of religion in daily life or compromise its 
strict system of public morals, including a ban on alcohol.

Because the SCT wants tourists to remember their visits, the interior 
ministry has ended a ban on photography with the declared goal of 
attracting more visitors.

But make no mistake: alcohol will remain banned, women will have to 
cover from head to toe and Muslims alone can set foot in the Islamic 
holy cities of Mecca and Medina.

"We are shooting for high-end individuals, there won't be any mass 
tourism here. We target people who like Saudi Arabia for what it is, 
people who will like the experience and hopefully come back again and 
again," said SCT spokesman Majid
al-Shiddi.

With oil receipts at record levels, Saudi Arabia can afford to take it 
slow. It hopes to lure 1.5 million tourists by 2020 -- compared to less 
than 100,000 foreign tourists who are not pilgrims today -- and to see a 
rise from 5 to 18 percent in
tourism's contribution to its economy.

 From scuba to Kaaba

The tourism drive comes as the world's top oil producer seeks to 
diversify its economy and find jobs for a rapidly growing population of 
17 million Saudis.

"We have a lot to offer non-Muslim tourists. Scuba-diving, a diversified 
landscape, the hospitality and historic sites. There are more than 6,300 
heritage sites," Shiddi told Reuters.

Officials expect Mecca, where millions of worshippers gather each year 
during the haj season, to remain the most visited city, followed by 
Medina. But authorities will now try to show tourists the rest of the 
country too.

"Mecca and Medina will be a must stopover for Muslim tourists," Shiddi 
said. "But there are many pilgrims who do not visit other cities in the 
kingdom. If we manage to get high-end pilgrims to visit other cities 
that would be great."

Already, work is underway to make sure that when visitors do arrive they 
have somewhere to stay, places to shop and ways of getting around. And 
Mecca is at the heart of this drive.

Real estate developers say the holy city accounts for more than half of 
total investments in the kingdom.

Like Gulf playground Dubai, Mecca is enjoying a construction boom as 
exclusive hotels, apartments and shopping malls rise around the Grand 
Mosque.

Only the call to prayer halts works on the giant property projects, a 
stone's throw from the mosque which houses the Kaaba towards which 
Muslims turn in prayer five times each day.

Building a dream

"We expect the new tourist visas to raise by half the number of visitors 
to Mecca by 2011, pilgrims included," a senior official in Mecca's city 
council said.

The real estate projects -- led by Saudi developers Jiwar Real Estate 
Management Marketing and Development Company, Al Oula Development 
Company and Jebel Omar Development Company -- total around $20 billion 
of investment.

The biggest is Al Oula's $9.3 billion al-Shamiya, where apartments, 
shopping malls and hotels will accommodate up to 250,000 people when 
finished in a decade, a company official said.

Jiwar is expected to finish work on the $8 billion Abraj al-Beit project 
within two years. It includes hotels to accommodate around 65,000 
people, a convention centre,
restaurants and a shopping mall, as well as a 485-metre high (530 yards) 
tower -- mirroring similar projects in Dubai and other cities.

Jebel Omar Development, which plans to raise 2 billion riyals ($536 
million) by floating a 30 percent stake in an initial public offering as 
early as next year, is investing 10 billion riyals over seven years to 
accommodate up to 100,000 people and build 11 towers with hotels, 
apartments and shops.

Saudi Railways has launched a tender process for the construction of a 
high-speed train link from Mecca to Medina, and Mecca's road system is 
being updated to ease congestion.

Jeddah airport, the country's main and closest international hub to 
Mecca, is also under expansion to meet growing demand and raise annual 
capacity to 21 million passengers within 20 years. (*)

Copyright © 2006 ANTARA

October 30, 2006


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