Iran holds potential to receive 10 million foreign tourists annually, MP says
TEHRAN – Iran has the potential to receive 10 million foreign tourists each year, especially from the neighboring countries, a member of the Iranian parliament has said.
The preparation of needed infrastructure for accepting more travelers from neighboring countries can convey a message to the world that Iran is a safe and peaceful country, CHTN quoted Mohammad Safai as saying on Sunday.
The enemy’s Iranophobia project backfires whenever the country plays host to millions of travelers. They can introduce a safe and beautiful image of Iran to the world, he added.
Last August, tourism minister Ezzatollah Zarghami said that Iran recorded about 2.9 million foreign tourist arrivals over the past 11 months.
The tourism minister said the rate of tourist arrivals, concerning coronavirus restrictions, is ahead of some international estimates.
“Designing an Iranophobia project and presenting a negative image of Iran in some media is one of the obstacles to attracting foreign tourists,” Zarghami said.
“We have many relative advantages and facilities that none of the countries in the region have.”
Long shunned by Western travelers, the Islamic Republic has steadily stepped-up efforts to use tourism, over the past couple of years, to help promote its international image battered by endless opposition mostly from the U.S.
Experts believe even before the pandemic, Iran’s tourism was already grappling with some challenges, on top of those Western “media propaganda” aimed at scaring potential travelers away from the Islamic Republic. They say Iran is still somehow “unknown” to many potential travelers due to such a “media war.”
Before the COVID pandemic, Iran's tourism had constantly been growing, reaching more than eight million visitors in the Iranian calendar year 1398 (started March 21, 2019). That surge, however, helped prejudices to become thick and thin.
However, Iran’s trump card is that the country benefits from a wide variety of travel destinations ranging from seacoasts and lush green woods to towering mountains and harsh deserts. As a wallet-friendly destination with hospitable people, Iran has long been a desired destination for nature lovers, birdwatchers, powder chasers, culture devotees, pilgrims, museum-goers, foodies, adventurers, and medical travelers, to name a few.
Mass COVID-19 vaccinations, consecutive fam tours for foreign tour operators, easing travel procedures, and fresh strategies, altogether, suggest Iran is determined to experience a tourism rebound with a greater reliance on its numerous tourist spots of which 26 are UNESCO World Heritage, above all, its welcoming people.
ABU/AM