|
Tourists
keep coming despite February coup
MANILA STANDARD TODAY
April 11, 2006
International
visitor arrivals to the country grew by 11.5 percent
year-on-year in February 2006, despite the botched coup
attempt against the Arroyo administration that forced
several foreign embassies to issue negative advisories
on Philippine travel.
Data from the Tourism Research and Statistics Division,
which is under the Office of Planning and Tourism Promotions
of the Department of Tourism (DOT), showed that arrivals
hit 223,053 in February, or 22,925 higher than 200,128
recorded a year ago.
In particular, foreign visitor arrivals grew 10.4 percent
to 214,365 while overseas Filipinos' arrivals went up
by 45.7 percent to 8,688 during the month.
This followed the 22.1 percent rise in international
visitor arrivals to 268,818 in January 2006. In the
whole of 2005, arrivals grew 14.5 percent to historic-high
2.623 million from the previous high of 2.291 million
in 2004.
Tourism Secretary Joseph Ace Durano said that in the
first two months of 2006, arrivals nearly touched the
half-a-million level, or the highest for the period
in record.
Combined arrivals in January and February climbed by
17 percent to 491,871 this year from only 420,376 a
year ago. Durano said he is confident that the country
would be able to attract around 3 million foreign visitors
this year.
Data showed that South Korea has displaced the United
States as the largest market for foreign tourists this
year.
Arrivals from South Korea surged by 31.2 percent to
106,251 in the first two months of the year, while arrivals
from the United States went up by 9.5 percent to 97,714.
The volume of foreign visitor arrivals from Japan, the
third largest market, increased by 11.4 percent to 76,402
while arrivals from Taiwan grew by 12.7 percent to 23,486.
China was the fastest growing market for Philippine
tourism, with arrivals from the world's most populated
nation rising by 163 percent to 23,227 in January and
February.
Other top sources of foreign visitors were Hong Kong,
with 17,273; Australia, 15,954; Canada, 14,179; Singapore,
11,484; United Kingdom, 10,341; Germany, 9,789; and
Malaysia, 8,060.
Durano said the robust foreign tourist arrivals to the
Philippines are helping create thousands of jobs for
fresh college graduates.
He said tourism-related establishments like hotels,
resorts, restaurants, airlines, travel agencies, tour
operators, shipping and transport firms, commercial
centers and, tourism-oriented property developers are
hiring at least 34,000 additional employees in the tourism
sector in the first quarter of 2006 alone. Roderick
T. dela Cruz.
|