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Showing posts with label Visitors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Visitors. Show all posts

1/15/23

Tourism: which is the most visited country in the world ?

GlobalData, an analytics and consulting company, has crunched the numbers to find out which is Europe’s most visited country.

France has often claimed the top spot over the years, and now it is also set to reclaim its title as the most visited country in the world.

Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, France was the most visited country in the world attracting 88.1 million visitors in 2019, according to GlobalData.

Spain claimed the top spot in 2021, but France is on track to overtake it, having welcomed 66.6 million international visitors in 2022.

“Alongside Italy and Spain, France represents a significant segment of the growth in Western Europe,” says Hannah Free, travel and tourism analyst at GlobalData.

Read more at: https://www.euronews.com

2/11/21

Outer space: Have We Already Been Visited by Aliens? - by Elizabeth Kolber

In “Extraterrestrial,” Loeb lays out his reasoning as follows. The only way to make sense of ‘Oumuamua’s strange acceleration, without resorting to some sort of undetectable outgassing, is to assume that the object was propelled by solar radiation—essentially, photons bouncing off its surface. And the only way the object could be propelled by solar radiation is if it were extremely thin—no thicker than a millimetre—with a very low density and a comparatively large surface area. Such an object would function as a sail—one powered by light, rather than by wind. The natural world doesn’t produce sails; people do. Thus, Loeb writes, “ ‘Oumuamua must have been designed, built, and launched by an extraterrestrial intelligence.”

Kepler, researchers recently concluded that η⊕ has a value somewhere between .37 and .6. Since there are at least four billion sunlike stars in the Milky Way, this means that somewhere between 1.5 billion and 2.4 billion planets in our galaxy could, in theory, harbor life. No one knows what fraction of potentially habitable planets are, in fact, inhabited, but, even if the proportion is trivial, we’re still talking about millions—perhaps tens of millions—of planets in the galaxy that might be teeming with living things.

At a public event a few years ago, Ellen Stofan, who at the time was NASA’s chief scientist and is now the director of the National Air and Space Museum, said that she believed “definitive evidence” of “life beyond earth” would be found sometime in the next two decades.

Read complete report at: Have We Already Been Visited by Aliens? | The New Yorker

1/15/21

Netherlands Imposes Compulsory Rapid Tests for Citizens of UK, Ireland & South Africa

Africa or the United Kingdom will be obliged to present a proof of a negative result of the rapid Coronavirus test, before departure, the Netherland’s government has announced through a statement.

Read more at: Netherlands Imposes Compulsory Rapid Tests for Citizens of UK, Ireland & South Africa - SchengenVisaInfo.com

12/26/20

Netherlands: Negative test result mandatory for most travellers to NL

Everyone over the age of 12 arriving in the Netherlands from a high risk area by plane, boat, train or coach will have to be able to show a negative coronavirus test from December 29, the Dutch government has confirmed.

Read more at: (Update) Negative test result mandatory for most travellers to NL - DutchNews.nl

8/18/20

Canada - Covid 19 measures: Why Canada is keeping its international borders shut tight during COVID-19

While many countries are reopening their international borders, Canada continues to keep its doors firmly shut to most foreigners.

Many Canadians applaud the government for its strict travel restrictions, implemented to help stop the spread of COVID-19 in the country.

However, some affected groups — such as the travel industry — have urged Ottawa to relax some restrictions in ways they say would provide minimal risk.

Read more at :
Why Canada is keeping its international borders shut tight during COVID-19 | CBC News

5/19/20

Tourism: Spain: How soon will I be able to visit Spain?

José Luis Ábalos, the Spanish Minister of Transport insisted that once the nation has moved through the four phase plan to reach “the new normal” there would be no reason to keep the country shut off to foreign visitors.

Currently Spain has closed borders and is only allowing those who have very good reason to enter Spain, either because they are citizens or permanent residents here or because they have legitimate work reasons.

Since May 15th all those who enter are required to undergo a 14-day quarantine where they must self-isolate in their own homes or lodgings.

Internal travel in Spain is also banned with residents restricted to moving only around their own province until restrictions are lifted further.

Read more at: Q&A: How soon will I be able to visit Spain? - The Local

5/6/17

Visit USA ? Have you ever smoked pot? Saying yes can get foreigners barred for life at US border - by Rob Hotakainen

USA Tourism: Foreign Pot smokers will be banned for life
Canada's likely move to completely legalize marijuana next year promises to produce immediate spillover effects in the United States, starting with increased confusion at the U.S.-Canadian border.

"I'm expecting my business to boom," said Len Saunders, an immigration attorney from Blaine, Wash.

With recreational marijuana already legal up and down the West Coast, from Alaska to California, he said, more Canadians may let down their guard and admit to U.S. authorities that they've used marijuana, reason enough to get foreigners barred from entering the country. Beyond that, pot retailers and legalization backers say it's difficult to predict exactly what might happen if Canada, as expected, becomes only the second nation in the world to fully legalize pot for anyone over 18 on July 1, 2018.

Even with such a big move, Jacob Lamont figures the Canadian customers will keep coming to Evergreen Cannabis, his pot shop in Blaine, just a few blocks from the U.S.-Canadian border.

"I enjoy my brothers and sisters from the north — obviously they support my business quite well," said Lamont, who estimates that Canadian customers make up 60 percent of his year-round business. "They still come down here. They buy a lot of milk, they buy cigarettes and they buy alcohol, because the taxation is so high up there. And I have a feeling they're going to follow suit with marijuana."

Oregon Democratic Rep. Earl Blumenauer, a longtime champion of legalization, said it could be a game changer for Congress.

"It completely changes the dynamic," he said. "Some regard Canada as the 51st state. This is going to make a big difference in terms of adjusting attitudes and accelerating progress. ... It's going to help us bring these things to a head."

Saunders scoffed at the idea that the United States would ever legalize marijuana with President Donald Trump, a teetotaler, in the White House.

"You have a president who not only has an attorney general (Jeff Sessions) who is going to fight drugs, but you have a president who's never even had a sip of alcohol," Saunders said.

One of Saunders' clients, Alan Ranta, 36, a freelance music journalist from Vancouver, British Columbia, got barred last year as he tried to drive his Toyota Yaris into Washington state. During questioning, he was handcuffed and told a U.S. border guard he had smoked marijuana in the past. Even though he was not carrying the drug with him at the time, Ranta said, he was told that under U.S. law he had committed "a crime involving moral turpitude."

"It lulls you into a false sense of security when you don't have anything on you and you've done nothing wrong and you're going to a place where it's legal," Ranta said. "You keep thinking, 'This is crazy, why am I getting in trouble?'"

He figures he was stopped because he and a friend were headed to a music festival, with a banana suit, tutus and a psychedelic top hat visible in the car: "If it's an electronic music festival, we like to dress up in weird things that we'd never wear day to day."

Saunders said that even Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, as a private citizen, could be denied entry since he had admitted to smoking marijuana in the past. Saunders is advising people not to lie to border authorities but to refuse to answer any questions about past pot use.

Note EU-Digest: "Dear potential visitors to the US  - either you lie, or better still choose another country than Trumpland to visit".  

Read more: Have you ever smoked pot? Saying yes can get foreigners barred for life at US border

5/6/16

Turkish Tourism: Up to 6.5 million fewer international tourists this year

Turkey saw a double-digit drop in foreign visitor numbers in March and could end up with between 3.1 million and 6.5 million fewer international tourists this year, according to a leading market researcher.

The series of terror attacks in various parts of the country and the dispute with Russia combined to generate a 12.8% fall in foreign visitor numbers to 1.65 million in March, according to official statistics from the country’s tourism ministry. The number of German visitors dropped by 17.1% to 230,000 while the Russian market collapsed by nearly 59% to just 24,000 visitors.

Turkish market researcher Erol Karabulut, who operates the ‘turizmdatabank’ website, has warned that the country faces the loss of several million tourists this year. In his ‘Turkey package holiday report 2015’, made exclusively available to fvw, the experienced researcher has come up with four potential scenarios for this year.

His ‘best case’ scenario is that the number of Turkey visitors drops by ‘only’ 3.1 million (or 8.7%) in 2016 while tourism earnings would decline by 14.2% to €3.2 billion. But his ‘worst case’ forecast is for a dramatic decline of 18.1% - or 6.5 million fewer visitors – along with a 29.3% fall in tourism earnings, equivalent to €6.6 billion.

In any case, it will definitely be a tough year for tourism in Turkey,” Karabulut said. “But because the tourism industry did not cause the crisis, it can do little to end it again rapidly.”

In 2015, the number of foreign visitors to Turkey declined by 1.6% to 36.2 million, according to his report.

The German market performed well with a 6.3% increase to 5.6 million visitors. But the Russian market slumped by 18.5%, or 800,000 tourists, to 3.6 million visitors due to the much weaker rouble, while the British market dropped by 3.4% to 2.5 million visitors.

In terms of destinations, Istanbul welcomed 12.4 million visitors last year, a rise of 4.8%. In contrast, Antalya saw international arrivals fall by 5.3% to 10.8 million, the report showed.

Read more: Tornos News | Turkish Tourism: Up to 6.5 million fewer international tourists this year