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UNWTO Gives Voice To The Initiatives Of The Private Sector At FITUR 2021
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UNWTO Affiliate Members from the tourism sector, including private entities, associations and tourism boards across the world, have presented their initiatives and projects on tourism recovery at the
‘’UNWTO Affiliate Members Corner’’, held on 21 May at FITUR 2021, the International Tourism Fair Trade in Madrid (Spain). The forum, organized by the UNWTO Affiliate Members Department, provided a professional space for the UNWTO Affiliate Membership to showcase their projects at this important international tourism fair, one of first international mobility events in Europe. Advertisements
The event saw initiatives covering topics such as the digitalisation and innovation in tourism, marketing strategies for the recovery of tourism, and reactivation strategies to achieve a safer, more inclusive and more sustainable tourism sector when travel resumes.
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Spain’s state of emergency to end 9 May as FITUR readies for in-person return
The Spanish government has announced the ending of the country’s six month state of emergency on 9 May. It will herald the anticipated relaxation of restrictions, although some uncertainty remains on how the various regions will respond and where the powers lie to lift restrictions on meetings and movement.
Regional authorities, which have a high degree of autonomy in Spain, will still be able to dictate business opening hours and occupancy rates, however they will only be able to impose curfews, lockdowns and limits on gatherings with approval from local courts. Deputy prime minister Carmen Calvo said that the regions could propose measures that limit rights and freedoms, but they needed a judicial authorisation to enforce them. The Supreme Court would be the ultimate arbiter.
The Spanish government has announced the ending of the country’s six month state of emergency on 9 May. It will herald the anticipated relaxation of restrictions, although some uncertainty remains on how the various regions will respond and where the powers lie to lift restrictions on meetings and movement.
Regional authorities, which have a high degree of autonomy in Spain, will still be able to dictate business opening hours and occupancy rates, however they will only be able to impose curfews, lockdowns and limits on gatherings with approval from local courts. Deputy prime minister Carmen Calvo said that the regions could propose measures that limit rights and freedoms, but they needed a judicial authorisation to enforce them. The Supreme Court would be the ultimate arbiter.