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Lebanon quiet brings tourist boom

Lebanon has for decades been so unstable that most people prefer not to plan at

all and even short-term government planning is rare. But, as Natalia Antelava

reports, the country is experiencing an unprecedented tourism boom based in

part on its new-found stability and calm.

Elie Marouni, Lebanon's tourism minister, is a man with a plan. He has recently

launched a 10 year programme he calls "a vision" for the tourism industry in

Lebanon.

He insists he has reason to be optimistic.

His ministry estimates that two million tourists, which amounts to half of the

country's actual population, are expected to visit Lebanon before the end of

this summer.

"The numbers have doubled, and I am not surprised. Lebanon has it all: the

environment, weather, nature, nightlife, ruins and history," says Mr. Marouni.

the minute there is some sort of political stability, we all come back to

enjoy our country while we can.

Jasmine Khoury, tourist

Many Lebanese like to describe their country as the place where one can ski in

the morning and swim in the Mediterranean in the evening.

It's not just the beaches, mountains, culture and food that make Lebanon a

unique tourist destination.

In this largely conservative region, Lebanon is a place where the glitzy

nightlife is a thing of national pride, where alcohol flows freely, and where

less is more as far as bikini fashion is concerned.

These laid back beachwear rules apply to the resorts across the country,

including the south where the radical Shia group Hezbollah is in control.

Full resorts

But this summer's unprecedented influx of tourists has little to do with the

country's natural beauty or the relaxed attitudes of its residents.

The reason for the tourism boom is rather unnatural for Lebanon - political

stability.

Mr Marouni admits that it's because of the relative political calm that

hundreds of thousands of visitors have descended on Lebanon, paralysing the

traffic, filling the seaside resorts and bringing the much needed cash to the

economy.

The richest among the tourists come from the neighbouring countries of the Arab

Gulf, while most visitors from Europe and North America seem to be the members

of Lebanon's 12 million strong diaspora.

Jasmine Khoury, 32, fled the Lebanese civil war in the 1980s and grew up in the

UK. She says political stability for Lebanon is what sun is for London.

"In London, the second that the sun comes out people begin to pour out. Here,

the minute there is some sort of political stability, we all come back to enjoy

our country while we can.

"After all Lebanon's stability is as reliable as the English weather," Jasmine

adds with a smile.

Funding shortage

The same day that Elie Marouni spoke to me about his 10 year plan to build more

hotels, remove army checkpoints on the roads that lead to tourist sites and

renovate the battered ski lifts, the Lebanese army arrested 10 men on charges

of plotting terrorist attacks against United Nations workers in the South. The

army said the men were part of a larger network lined to al-Qaeda.

"It shows that we are fighting to stop terrorist in Lebanon and to make sure

that only the army has the weapons," Mr Marouni insists.

Lebanese companies are extremely tenacious. They all have very good

contingency plans, they are all able to function under extremely challenging

circumstances

Stephen Orr US-sponsored Lebanon Business Linkages Initiative

But he admits that the Lebanese government does not have a full control over

what goes on in the country, and that security is a real issue that turns many

potential visitors away.

There are major financial issues too. Mr Marouni's says he needs around US

$100m a year to implement his plan, but at the moment he only has around US $8m

a year at his disposal.

The Ministry, housed in a run down building in Beirut's Harma district, cannot

afford to place advertisements on major international TV networks.

"Good marketing and improving Lebanon's image could play a huge role in

attracting tourists," says Stephen Orr, the general director of the US

government sponsored project, which tries to link private businesses to the

global markets.

He works with dozens of companies in the tourism industry that have mushroomed

here over the years.

Tenacious

The tourism boom shows that while the government drags itself through endless

political crises and stalemates, Lebanon's famously creative entrepreneurs are

grabbing every chance to develop and grow.

"I am very impressed with Lebanon's private sector. Lebanese companies are

extremely tenacious. They all have very good contingency plans, they are all

able to function under extremely challenging circumstances," says Stephen Orr.

The level of the development of the private sector, and Lebanon's natural

beauty, is the reason Mr Orr believes the country could easily rival Turkey and

Greece as a Mediterranean tourist destination.

But he says the country needs at least five years of stability to get to that

level. And few in Lebanon believe that stability can last that long.

Back in his office, even Mr Marouni admits that there is an element of wishful

thinking in his 10 year plan.

"In this country something might happen any minute, and any minute we could be

thrown 10 years back in time," he says.