Saudis discover a hidden gem: Ukraine sees tourist spike

In the first half of 2021, the number of Saudi tourists alone visiting Ukraine skyrocketed to 14,000, compared to just 350 last year.


Saudi tourists ride horse-drawn carriages, pose for portraits by street artists and play chess on benches with locals in Lviv, a city in Ukraine accustomed to hosting European guests.

But with strict Covid-19 travel restrictions still in place across Europe, travellers from the Middle East – especially Saudi Arabia – now rank among the top visitors to former ex-Soviet state.

The trend has given hope to the country’s pandemic-hit tourism industry.

“We need to seize the moment,” says Bogdan Gets, a tour guide on a sightseeing train that ferries tourists along cobbled streets in central Lviv, a city known for its Renaissance architecture.

Ukraine
Middle Eastern tourists sit in a street cafe in Lviv, some 540km west of Kiev on 15 August 2021. Saudi tourists in traditional dress ride medieval carriages, pose for portraits by street artists and play chess on benches with locals in Lviv, a city in Ukraine more accustomed to European visitors. But with strict travel restrictions still in place across Europe, travellers from the Middle East – especially Saudi Arabia – now rank among the top visitors to the ex-Soviet. Picture: Sergei Gapon /AFP

For Gets and his colleagues at “Chudo Tour” (Wonder Tour), the unexpected influx of tourists from the Middle East is a chance to recover after a string of lockdowns that put pressure on Ukraine’s struggling economy.

In the first half of 2021, the number of Saudi tourists alone visiting Ukraine skyrocketed to 14,000, compared to just 350 in the same period last year, according to the country’s tourism agency.

This new cohort are attracted by a visa-free regime enacted in August last year, and cheap direct flights.

In previous years, the city was mostly visited by Poles, Belarusians, Turks, Germans and Britons.

“Last year put the tourism industry in extreme conditions”, the agency said, and “radically changed” how tourists decide which countries to visit.

Ukraine
Middle Eastern tourists ride a carriage in Lviv, some 540km west of Kiev on 14 August 2021. Saudi tourists in traditional dress ride medieval carriages, pose for portraits by street artists and play chess on benches with locals in Lviv, a city in Ukraine more accustomed to European visitors. But with strict travel restrictions still in place across Europe, travellers from the Middle East – especially Saudi Arabia – now rank among the top visitors to the ex-Soviet. Picture: Sergei Gapon/AFP

Before the pandemic, 32-yearold Asma, a tourist from Saudi Arabia, travelled with her husband and two sons to various European destinations every year, but never considered Ukraine.

After exploring Lviv and the capital Kiev this summer, the family was pleasantly surprised.

“The bars, the food and the coffee – all things here in Ukraine are amazing,” Asma said outside the iconic Lviv Opera.

Anna Nayda, the head of the Kredens Café chain, admitted that the local tourism industry experienced some initial difficulties when catering for their new customers.

“At first it was very difficult to find a common language,” she told
AFP.

Touring
Middle Eastern tourists holds a sunflower as she walks down the street in Lviv, some 540km west of Kiev on 14 August 2021. Saudi tourists in traditional dress ride medieval carriages, pose for portraits by street artists and play chess on benches with locals in Lviv, a city in Ukraine more accustomed to European visitors. But with strict travel restrictions still in place across Europe, travellers from the Middle East – especially Saudi Arabia – now rank among the top visitors to the ex-Soviet. Picture: Sergei Gapon/AFP

But now her cafes are printing menus in Arabic and replacing pork in their sandwiches to ensure they have halal options.

Several souvenir shops in the city have started making signs in Arabic while “Chudo Tour” said they are translating their pre-recorded audio guides.

“This is a push for change,” Nayda said, adding that during the pandemic businesses struggled to pay rent and salaries.

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“Of course, in these conditions you think about how to survive. We decided to make changes and everything turned out great,” she said.

Tourism to Ukraine is picking back up, but the climb is slow. After the number of tourists in 2020 was just a quarter of the level of the previous year in 2020, it was up 9% in the first half of this year compared to the second half of last year.

The number of visitors from the Gulf – mainly Saudi Arabia and Bahrain – gradually increased throughout the summer, said Khrystyna Kaguy, a manager at the Reikartz hotel group.

Hassan, a 64-year-old businessman from Saudi Arabia, opted for a family holiday in Ukraine on the recommendation of a friend.

Touring
Middle Eastern tourists wearing raincoats walk down the street in Lviv, some 540km west of Kiev on 17 August 2021. Saudi tourists in traditional dress ride medieval carriages, pose for portraits by street artists and play chess on benches with locals in Lviv, a city in Ukraine more accustomed to European visitors. But with strict travel restrictions still in place across Europe, travellers from the Middle East — especially Saudi Arabia – now rank among the top visitors to the ex-Soviet. Picture: Sergei Gapon/AFP

Compared to Germany or Switzerland, he described the country as “more energetic, more dynamic” and where the locals “are family oriented”.

“We’ll definitely come back,” he said on a café terrace with his wife in Kiev.

For tourists coming from arid conditions, trees and rain are a big draw.

“The rooms that even slightly overlook the trees or the park are a big preference,” Kaguy said.

Gets, meanwhile, said he had never seen an adult so happy to see rain.

“This is a thrill for them. They say that they came to Lviv on purpose, they are only interested in rain.”

According to Asma, the rain is like “magic”.

“Looks like heaven,” she said. “We will come back.”

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