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Omicron travel bans strike South Africa’s safari business

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has criticized the travel bans imposed by Britain and many others, as ‘hypocritical, harsh and not supported by science’

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Tebogo Masiu, and Smagele Twala are greeted by a giraffe during a game drive in the Dinokeng game reserve near Hammanskraal, South Africa. Pic/AP

Tebogo Masiu, and Smagele Twala are greeted by a giraffe during a game drive in the Dinokeng game reserve near Hammanskraal, South Africa. Pic/AP

Recent travel bans imposed on South Africa and neighboring countries in response to the discovery of the omicron variant in southern Africa have hammered the country’s safari business, already hard hit by the pandemic.

South Africa’s tourism industry suffered a more than 70% drop in foreign tourists in 2020, with Covid-19 blamed for the drop from about 15 million visitors in 2019 to less than 5 million in 2020. Tourism employs about 4.7% of South Africa’s workforce.

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