French tourism sector faces cancellations over unrest

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French police stand in position as fireworks go off during clashes with youth, after the death of Nahel, a 17-year-old teenager killed by a French police officer during a traffic stop, in Nanterre, Paris suburb, France, June 30, 2023. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

French police stand in position during clashes with youth, in Nanterre, France, on June 30, 2023.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- Days of violent protests across France after the

fatal police shooting of a teenager

have started to impact the country’s tourism sector, with hotels and restaurants facing cancellations, while some have also suffered damage in the unrest.

Since the death of 17-year-old teen Nahel M. during a traffic stop in a Paris suburb on Tuesday, “our hotel members have suffered a wave of cancellations of reservations in all the territories affected by the damage and clashes”, said chef Thierry Marx, president of the main association for hotel and catering industry employers.

Mr Marx said on Friday that he was receiving daily alerts from industry professionals who have suffered “attacks, looting and destruction of their businesses, including some restaurants and cafes”.

“Our establishments are intrinsically hospitality venues, and sometimes even refuges and places of help in crisis situations. They must not suffer the consequences of anger that they have not aroused, and we condemn these actions.”

Mr Marx wants the authorities to do “everything” to guarantee the safety of people in the hotel and catering industry in the world’s most popular tourist destination.

The French retail federation also called for reinforced police security around stores.

The riots “gave rise to real scenes of looting”, said its managing director Jacques Creyssel, with “more than a hundred medium and large food or non-food stores vandalised, looted or even burned”.

These incidents “are extremely serious and have an extremely heavy cost”, according to Mr Creyssel, who said he had asked the economy, interior and trade ministers to act.

The Paris Ile-de-France Chamber of Commerce said it was ensuring its teams were mobilised to “provide the necessary support and technical assistance, particularly in terms of continuing operations, insurance compensation” for traders and managers of affected companies.

The GHR organisation for independent hotels and restaurants in France deplored that “foreign (TV networks) are starting to show images of Paris on fire and blood, which does not correspond to reality”.

“Will the violence and riots continue and cause a real wave of cancellations? That is the risk,” managing director Franck Trouet told AFP.

“Asian tourists, in particular, who are very concerned about security, may not hesitate to postpone or cancel their trip,” he warned.

Mr Didier Arino, managing director of the Protourisme firm, said: “Tourists who know us well, like the Belgians or the British, who also have problems themselves in their suburbs, will be able to make sense of things.”

But in the end, he said, “it is as if we were doing a negative publicity campaign worth several tens of millions of euros for destination France”.

The confederation of tobacconists was also indignant at the “looting and ransacking of shops, including 91 tobacconists during these last days of clashes”.

Paris Tourist Office president Jean-Francois Rial said that “if it continues like this, it can significantly complicate the organisation of the Olympic Games, especially since a good part of the events will take place in Seine-Saint-Denis”, a disadvantaged area in the north of Paris. AFP


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