Saudis to seek $20 billion investments for planned
tourism landmark
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[March 20, 2019]
By Stephen Kalin
RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia is
targeting up to $20 billion of investments through 2035 for a planned
landmark tourism destination and will hold a global investor roadshow
before the end of the year, the head of the project told Reuters.
Al-Ula, the site of an ancient civilization in a remote northwestern
corner of the country, is part of plans by the world's top crude
exporter to diversify its economy away from oil and open up after
decades of reclusion.
Amr Madani, chief executive of the Royal Commission for al-Ula, said in
an interview this week he expects targeted investments to eventually
generate 35,000 jobs and contribute a combined 120 billion riyals ($32
billion) to gross domestic product over the next 17 years.
"The bulk of that in the beginning will be construction-led but at
steady state it will be tourism-led," he said. This would be alongside
secondary industries like sustainable agriculture, heritage preservation
and film production.
The government, along with a French cultural partnership, has already
begun financing infrastructure at al-Ula, which features majestic
rock-hewn tombs and 2,000-year-old stone carvings by the Nabateans, the
pre-Islamic Arab people that also built Petra in neighboring Jordan.
"We'd rather inject zero from public money, but the reality is we need
to kickstart the investment. So we don't know what that number is but
we're committed to keep investing until we get to the right conditions
where funds jump in," Madani said.
Various investment vehicles will be considered, including joint ventures
and long leases, he added.
OVERWHELMED
Al-Ula’s development is part of a push to preserve pre-Islamic heritage
sites in order to attract non-Muslim tourists, strengthen national
identity and temper the austere strain of Sunni Islam that has dominated
Saudi Arabia for decades.
[to top of second column] |
Visitors walk outside the tombs at the Madain Saleh antiquities
site, al-Ula, Saudi Arabia February 10, 2019. Picture taken February
10, 2019. REUTERS/Stephen Kalin
It is also part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's efforts to make the
country an entertainment destination, with the kingdom looking to attract dozens
of Western acts, including a planned Michael Jackson-inspired "Thriller"
theatrical show.
The authorities eventually want to attract up to 2 million visitors annually to
al-Ula, but they are starting with about 1,000 hotel rooms plus desert camps and
a three month visitor season called Winter at Tantoura that just concluded its
first iteration.
"We were overwhelmed, not only by those who came, but by people who saw the
pictures and wanted to come," said Madani. "There is a lot of excitement around
the world."
Plans to admit tourists to Saudi Arabia have been discussed for years but have
not come to fruition due to sluggish bureaucracy and concern over conservative
sentiment.
International outcry over the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi by Saudi
agents last October may give some potential visitors pause, but calls for
Western performers to boycott the kingdom have not caught on.
Alongside "seasonal" visas issued for Tantoura, the government has approved
plans to issue electronic visas for foreign visitors to attend sporting events
and concerts, but it is unclear when those will be available.
(This story corrects name in paragraph 8 to Salman not Sultan).
(Reporting By Stephen Kalin; editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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