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Turkey has increased a subsidy it pays to the operators of charter flights bringing foreign tourists into the country in an attempt to bolster visitor numbers which have fallen sharply due to a series of bomb attacks and tensions with Russia.
The government is offering a 30 percent increase on the $6,000 subsidy for charter flights carrying at least 150 passengers between June 1-Aug. 31, the height of the summer season, according to an announcement in the Official Gazette.
Turkey’s southern beaches are normally packed with tourists from Germany, Britain, other parts of Europe and Russia during the summer months. But Russians have been told to stay away by Moscow after Turkey shot down a Russian jet near the border with Syria last year, while security fears are deterring Europeans.
On Tuesday a car bomb ripped through a police bus in central Istanbul during morning rush hour, killing 11 people and wounding 36 near the main tourist district, the fourth major bombing in Turkey’s biggest city this year. The attack was claimed by Kurdish militants.
Some economists have forecast that tourism revenue will drop by a quarter this year, costing around $8 billion, the equivalent of 1 percent of GDP.
Source: financialexpress.com