/ 29 September 2009

Swine flu fears hit Saudi religious tourism

Standing behind a wall of pearls and rosaries in a shop in Mecca, souvenir dealer Mohammad Hamdi says business has never been so bad.

Shops, hotels and tour operators in Islam’s holiest city in western Saudi Arabia are counting the losses as many pilgrims, worried about the spread of swine flu, have chosen to stay at home.

The haj, one of the world’s biggest religious gatherings, is still two months away, but there has already been a marked fall in the number of visitors for the minor pilgrimage known as umra, which can be done at any time of the year.

”In previous years people were buying a lot, but now only a few come, which is hitting sales,” said Hamdi, from Egypt.

Losses in Mecca are small compared to the massive wealth of the kingdom which sits on more than a fifth of global oil reserves and billions of dollars in state coffers.

But the slump is plaguing a sector the government hopes to develop to help lower dependence on oil. Banks are also trying to cope with the debt problems of large family firms.

Faced with a mainly young native population of more than 18 million, job creation is a key challenge for the government.

Hotel occupancy rates during the last ten days of the fasting month of Ramadan, when many perform umra, fell by more than a third to 55% compared to last year, said Walid Abu Sabaa, head of the tourism and hotels committee at the Mecca chamber of commerce.

Countries such as Egypt, Tunisia and Iraq have sought to limit the number of pilgrims after Saudi Arabia urged the elderly and people with chronic diseases to postpone trips.

Businessmen say their biggest-spending clients are staying away. ”There is an absence of Gulf pilgrims from Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain or Oman,” said Saudi jewellery dealer Saud Mohammad, who owns a store inside a mall.

Pilgrim tourism suffers
Analysts differ on the exact fallout of the H1N1 virus on tourism but agree there will be a hit. ”Saudi authorities will be faced with serious health and economic challenges,” said a report by Political Capital consultancy.

Despite hosting historical sights such as the Nabataean town of Madain Saleh, the kingdom has never become a tourist destination like neighbours Dubai or Bahrain, due to the austere Islamic rules dictating daily life and a tough visa regime.

Women must cover their hair and are not allowed to drive and unrelated men and women cannot mix. Alcohol, cinemas and bars are banned in the kingdom.

Tourism only contributed 2,7% to the gross domestic product (GDP) in 2008, according to the central bank. The sector directly employs about 440 000 mostly expatriate workers.

The industry depends on domestic travel and pilgrims in Mecca and Medina — both holy cities are witnessing massive investments to build hotels, malls or time-sharing apartments.

Authorities did not announce any deaths linked to swine flu in the two cities during Ramadan. In total, Saudi Arabia has treated around 3 500 cases of which 26 died, local media said.

The country plans new health centres and to import 10 million doses of vaccine. Pharmacies in Mecca give out masks to many pilgrims, police, shop and restaurant staff.

But even if the numbers go down, authorities still face a big challenge — thousands flock every day to the Grand Mosque with some poor pilgrims sleeping and dozing in groups on prayer mats. Workers promptly clean up the mosque, toilets and narrow streets but dustbins quickly fill up in central malls where many eat in cheap restaurants or on the ground.

”I heard much of swine flu…(but) for an old woman like me there would be nothing better if I died here in this holy land,” said a pilgrim in her 70s from Algeria.

Additional reporting by Asma Alsharif in Jeddah. Editing by Andrew Hammond and Samia Nakhoul