logo
Lebanon aims to lure back wealthy Gulf tourists to jumpstart its war-torn economy

Lebanon aims to lure back wealthy Gulf tourists to jumpstart its war-torn economy

BEIRUT — Fireworks lit up the night sky over Beirut's famous St. Georges Hotel as hit songs from the 1960s and '70s filled the air in a courtyard overlooking the Mediterranean Sea.
The retro-themed event was hosted last month by Lebanon's Tourism Ministry to promote the upcoming summer season and perhaps recapture some of the good vibes from an era viewed as a golden one for the country. In the years before a civil war began in 1975, Lebanon was the go-to destination for wealthy tourists from neighboring Gulf countries seeking beaches in summer, snow-capped mountains in winter and urban nightlife year-round.
In the decade after the war, tourists from Gulf countries — and crucially, Saudi Arabia — came back, and so did Lebanon's economy. But by the early 2000s, as the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah gained power, Lebanon's relations with Gulf countries began to sour. Tourism gradually dried up, starving its economy of billions of dollars in annual spending.
Now, after last year's bruising war with Israel, Hezbollah is much weaker and Lebanon's new political leaders sense an opportunity to revitalize the economy once again with help from wealthy neighbors. They aim to disarm Hezbollah and rekindle ties with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries, which in recent years have prohibited their citizens from visiting Lebanon or importing its products.
'Tourism is a big catalyst, and so it's very important that the bans get lifted,' said Laura Khazen Lahoud, the country's tourism minister.
On the highway leading to the Beirut airport, once-ubiquitous banners touting Hezbollah's leadership have been replaced with commercial billboards and posters that read 'a new era for Lebanon.' In the center of Beirut, and especially in neighborhoods that hope to attract tourists, political posters are coming down, and police and army patrols are on the rise.
There are signs of thawing relations with some Gulf neighbors. The United Arab Emirates and Kuwait have lifted yearslong travel bans.
All eyes are now on Saudi Arabia, a regional political and economic powerhouse, to see if it will follow suit, according to Lahoud and other Lebanese officials. A key sticking point is security, these officials say. Although a ceasefire with Israel has been in place since November, near-daily airstrikes have continued in southern and eastern Lebanon, where Hezbollah over the years had built its political base and powerful military arsenal.
As vital as tourism is — it accounted for almost 20% of Lebanon's economy before it tanked in 2019 — the country's leaders say it is just one piece of a larger puzzle they are trying to put back together.
Lebanon's agricultural and industrial sectors are in shambles, suffering a major blow in 2021 when Saudi Arabia banned their exports after accusing Hezbollah of smuggling drugs into Riyadh. Years of economic dysfunction have left the country's once-thriving middle class in a state of desperation.
The World Bank says poverty nearly tripled in Lebanon over the past decade, affecting close to half its population of nearly 6 million. To make matters worse, inflation is soaring, with the Lebanese pound losing 90% of its value, and many families lost their savings when banks collapsed.
Tourism is seen by Lebanon's leaders as the best way to kickstart the reconciliation needed with Gulf countries — and only then can they move on to exports and other economic growth opportunities.
'It's the thing that makes most sense, because that's all Lebanon can sell now,' said Sami Zoughaib, research manager at the Policy Initiative, a Beirut-based think tank.
With summer approaching, flights to Lebanon are already packed with expats and locals from countries that overturned their travel bans, and hotels say bookings have been brisk.
At the event hosted last month by the tourism ministry, the owner of the St. Georges Hotel, Fady El-Khoury, beamed. The hotel, owned by his father in its heyday, has acutely felt Lebanon's ups and downs over the decades, closing and reopening multiple times because of wars. 'I have a feeling that the country is coming back after 50 years,' he said.
On a recent weekend, as people crammed the beaches of the northern city of Batroun and jet skis whizzed along the Mediterranean, local business people sounded optimistic that the country was on the right path.
'We are happy, and everyone here is happy,' said Jad Nasr, co-owner of a private beach club. 'After years of being boycotted by the Arabs and our brothers in the Gulf, we expect this year for us to always be full.'
Still, tourism is not a panacea for Lebanon's economy, which for decades has suffered from rampant corruption and waste.
Lebanon has been in talks with the International Monetary Fund for years over a recovery plan that would include billions in loans and require the country to combat corruption, restructure its banks, and bring improvements to a range of public services, including electricity and water.
Without those and other reforms, Lebanon's wealthy neighbors will lack confidence to invest there, experts said. A tourism boom alone would serve as a 'morphine shot that would only temporarily ease the pain' rather than stop the deepening poverty in Lebanon, Zoughaib said.
The tourism minister, Lahoud, agreed, saying a long-term process has only just begun.
'But we're talking about subjects we never talked about before,' she said. 'And I think the whole country has realized that war doesn't serve anyone, and that we really need our economy to be back and flourish again.'
Chehayeb writes for the Associated Press.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lammy not accepting Iran's claims over enriched uranium
Lammy not accepting Iran's claims over enriched uranium

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Lammy not accepting Iran's claims over enriched uranium

Foreign Secretary David Lammy says he does not accept Iran's claims that the country is enriching uranium for academic purposes. Representatives from the United Kingdom, Germany and France held talks with Iran last week to try to break the deadlock over the country's nuclear programme. Tehran maintains it is open to diplomacy, though it recently suspended cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). A central concern for western powers was highlighted when the IAEA reported in May that Iran's stockpile of uranium enriched to 60% – just below weapons-grade level – had grown to more than 400kg. In a wide-ranging interview with The Guardian, Mr Lammy said: 'Its leaders cannot explain to me – and I've had many conversations with them – why they need 60% enriched uranium. 'If I went to Sellafield or Urenco in Cheshire, they haven't got anything more than 6%. The Iranians claim it's for academic use, but I don't accept that.' Mr Lammy warned that Iran developing nuclear weapons could lead to an escalation of tensions in the Middle East. Israel and the United States carried our strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities in June. 'Many of your readers will have watched Oppenheimer and seen the fallout of (the US building an atomic bomb),' he said. 'So it's what (a nuclear Iran) might mean in terms of other countries in the neighbourhood who would desire one, too. And we would be very suddenly handing over to our children and grandchildren a world that had many more nuclear weapons in it than it has today.' The Foreign Secretary said he had heard Israeli arguments in favour of regime change in Tehran, but did not believe that was behind the US decision to strike. The Tottenham MP added any decision to topple the government was one for the Iranian people, with his focus 'on what the UK can do to stop Iran becoming a nuclear power'. Last month, Mr Lammy suggested that Britain, France and Germany could 'snap back' on sanctions against Iran unless the country gets 'serious' about stepping back from its nuclear ambitions. He told the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee: 'Iran face even more pressure in the coming weeks because the E3 can snap back on our sanctions, and it's not just our sanctions, it's actually a UN mechanism that would impose dramatic sanctions on Iran across nearly every single front in its economy. 'So they have a choice to make. It's a choice for them to make. 'I'm very clear about the choice they should make, but I'm also clear that the UK has a decision to make that could lead to far greater pain for the Iranian regime unless they get serious about the international desire to see them step back from their nuclear ambitions at this time.'

Starmer's Courtship of Trump May Cost Him at Home
Starmer's Courtship of Trump May Cost Him at Home

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

Starmer's Courtship of Trump May Cost Him at Home

'Yo, Blair, what are you doing?' was George W. Bush's cheery greeting to Tony Blair, reportedly picked up by a microphone during the G8 summit in St Petersburg in 2006. 'Yo Blair' became a satirical catchphrase overnight — yet more evidence for Blair's enemies that the prime minister was the US president's poodle. Blair had indeed joined Bush's 'war of choice' against Iraq and later supported Israel's America-backed campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon. Blair's members of Parliament believed this was one special relationship the UK could do without — a major reason for the three-time general election winner's unwilling departure from office in 2007. Today, Keir Starmer, who opposed Blair's intervention in Iraq, knows there's a domestic price to pay for his successful courtship of Donald Trump, another right-wing Republican in the White House.

OpenAI Raises $8.3 Billion at $300 Billion Valuation
OpenAI Raises $8.3 Billion at $300 Billion Valuation

Business Insider

timean hour ago

  • Business Insider

OpenAI Raises $8.3 Billion at $300 Billion Valuation

Microsoft-backed (MSFT) AI firm OpenAI has raised $8.3 billion in fresh funding at a $300 billion valuation, according to The New York Times. Indeed, the raise is part of the company's bigger $40 billion fundraising goal for 2025 and came months earlier than expected. It is worth noting that OpenAI had already secured $2.5 billion in March and initially planned to add another $7.5 billion later this year, but accelerated its timeline as investor demand surged due to the company's fast growth. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Indeed, The Information reported on Thursday that OpenAI reached $12 billion in annualized revenue and surpassed 700 million weekly active ChatGPT users. Meanwhile, the Times suggested that the number may be closer to $13 billion and could hit $20 billion by the end of the year. It also helps that the Trump administration's AI Action Plan and ongoing talks with Microsoft could push OpenAI toward its goal of becoming a fully for-profit company. As a result, the latest round was led by Dragoneer Investment Group, which invested $2.8 billion in one of its most significant bets to date. Other new backers included Blackstone (BX), TPG (TPG), and T. Rowe Price (TROW), alongside well-known firms like Andreessen Horowitz, Founders Fund, Sequoia Capital, and Fidelity. Interestingly, though, some early investors were reportedly frustrated because they received smaller allocations in this round, as OpenAI prioritized bringing in strategic partners to support its next growth phase. Is MSFT Stock a Buy? Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Strong Buy consensus rating on MSFT stock based on 33 Buys and two Holds assigned in the last three months. Furthermore, the average MSFT price target of $614.72 per share implies 17.3% upside potential.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store