Blame it on the lira. While Turkish currency was once the butt of travelers' jokes, up until only a few years ago the victim of hyperinflation and denominated in the millions, today the lira is not only holding its own but finding itself increasingly strong, especially compared to the dollar. As recent visitors to Turkey have probably found out, though, the rise of the lira has its downside: higher prices. The New York Times has the scoop on why that Turkish rug you saw in Istanbul's Grand Bazaar was so expensive.
Recently appointed 26-year-old Georgian tourism chief Maia Sidamonidze may think big, but her Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts are cautioning that bigger is not always better.
Sidamonidze’s intentions dovetail with Georgia's two stated goals of building regional economic bonds with Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkey, and turning Georgia itself into a major hot spot for international tourism.
But Sidamonidze appeared to overlook one minor obstacle to the grand plan: Some of the proposed tourism club members hate each others' guts. Turkey and Armenia are not even willing to share a border; Azerbaijan and Armenia have been embroiled in a bitter and bloody dispute over breakaway Nagorno Karabakh for the past 22 years.
Could tourism succeed where international mediators have failed? Don't bet on it. Azerbaijani and Armenian tourism officials and companies took turns dousing Sidamonidze with a bucket of cold water.
“Any joint projects, regional projects with Armenia are out of the question,” bristled Zohra Alyeva, spokesperson for Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism. Armenian officials termed the plan "unrealistic."
Some Armenian and Georgian commentators called for updating Sidamonidze, who spent years abroad, on the past two decades of news from the South Caucasus.