People visit the Citadel archaeological site in Amman, Jordan, on Dec. 28, 2021.Photo:Xinhua
Jordan's pandemic-hit tourism industry has shown signs of recovery for the first quarter of 2022 and the Eid al-Fitr holiday, following massive campaigns to promote the kingdom's tourism profile and the eased COVID-19 restrictions.
"All figures indicate that the tourism sector is undergoing a recovery ... The holiday season during Eid al-Fitr saw a large increase of visitors to various sites across the country, while occupancy rates in hotels of Aqaba and the Dead Sea area exceeded 90 percent," Abeer Nauman, economic news editor at the Jordan Press Foundation, told Xinhua.
Archaeological and tourist sites in Jordan have received about 190,000 visitors home and abroad for the four-day Eid holiday that marks the end of the fasting month of Ramadan, state-run Petra news agency reported.
Jordan's tourism revenues rose by 251 percent during the first quarter of 2022, reaching 893 million US dollars, the Tourism Ministry's spokesman Ahmad Rifai told Xinhua.
Meanwhile, some 780,000 people visited the kingdom in the first quarter, up by 298 percent year-on-year, the state-owned Al-Mamlaka TV reported, citing Tourism Minister Nayef Fayez.
"We are on the right track toward the recovery of tourism, and we have exceeded our targets for the first quarter already," the minister was quoted as saying.
According to Rifai, the ministry's massive promotional campaigns and the adjustment of pandemic-related restrictions in the kingdom have contributed to the recovery.
Noting tourism's 14-percent contribution to Jordan's GDP, Nauman called for more promotional efforts to revitalize tourism and stimulate hotels, restaurants, and transport consumptions.
According to figures by the Economic and Social Council of Jordan, the number of workers in the tourism industry in 2020 reached 21,000, of whom 73 percent were Jordanians.
Abdel Hakim Al-Hindi, head of Jordan Hotel Association, said the hotel occupancy may continue to increase in the near future, because of eased coronavirus restrictions and mild climate of the kingdom.
People visit the Citadel archaeological site in Amman, Jordan, on Dec. 28, 2021.Photo:Xinhua
People gather at the King Hussein Bin Talal Mosque in Amman, Jordan, on April 1, 2022.Photo:Xinhua
Tourists visit the reopened ancient city of Petra in Jordan June 20, 2020.Photo:Xinhua