Prasanna Ranatunga India Sri Lanka Prasanna Ranatunga India Sri Lanka

Expect tourism to return to normalcy by February: Tourism Minister

Reading now: 683
www.newsfirst.lk

COLOMBO (News 1st); We expect tourism to return to normalcy by January and February, says Tourism Minister Prasanna Ranatunga.

Speaking to media, the Minister of Tourism said that he expects around 100,000 – 125,000 tourists to visit the country in January.

However, the Minister said that he expects at least 200,000 tourists inflow to the country for it to return to normalcy, and that he hopes to bring tourists from countries in the Middle East and India to Sri Lanka to bring the country to the level it was once in.Speaking further, the Minister said that from January to December, about 180,000 tourists arrived in the country, and out of that, 86,000 visited only in December, which reflects a good trend. .

Read more on newsfirst.lk
The website covid-19.rehab is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

Jim Kenney - Founder of Philly Fighting COVID agrees to destroy personal health data collected during clinic debacle - fox29.com - state Pennsylvania
fox29.com
53%
806
Founder of Philly Fighting COVID agrees to destroy personal health data collected during clinic debacle
Andrei Doroshin PHILADELPHIA - A graduate student in psychology whose COVID-19 vaccine operation got shut down by Philadelphia last year has settled with the state attorney general's office and agreed to destroy all personal health information his start-up gathered.The agreement was filed Friday in Commonwealth Court and requires a judge's approval to take effect.Central to the accusations against Andrei Doroshin, who had almost no public health experience when the city gave him the task, was that he had intended to profit from the vaccine operation run by his start-up, called Philly Fighting COVID.Mayor Jim Kenney says Philly Fighting COVID was a mistake after the Inspector General found no malice, no ill-intent, and no one seeking personal gain.Doroshin denied the allegations by the attorney general's office, including violating the state's nonprofit corporation law.Under the agreement, Doroshin and his associates are barred from managing charitable assets or soliciting charitable donations in Pennsylvania for 10 years.Doroshin also must destroy the personal health information gathered through the vaccine pre-registration service and is barred from receiving any financial benefit from the information or the vaccine.Doroshin must also dissolve Philly Fighting COVID.City officials said they gave him the job because he and his friends had organized one of the community groups that set up COVID-19 testing sites throughout the city in 2020.But they shut the vaccine operation down once they learned that Doroshin had switched his privacy notice to potentially sell patient data.
DMCA