Philippines’ Boracay Island just became one of the two Philippine destinations to receive the World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) Safe Travels Stamp next to Baguio City, indicating it has adopted globally recognized health protocols, as per media reports.
The WTTC Safe Travels Stamp is the world’s first safety and hygiene stamp for travellers to recognize governments and businesses that have adopted global health standardized protocols.
The Department of Tourism (DOT) also awarded the stamp to 11 hotels, when DOT Western Visayas Regional Director Cristine Mansinares said the WTTC gave the certificate last March 2021, which means it recognized Boracay has adopted a "touchless economy" and that its contact tracing works. "It is good news that we welcome because this will also boost the confidence of our travellers, especially our international tourists later on when we reopen to our international markets," she said.
In a statement, Tourism chief Bernadette Romulo-Puyat said: “Keeping our tourism workers and tourists safe will be a great leap forward in our ongoing quest to get the tourism industry back on its feet. Bringing tourists back to Boracay, the country’s tourism crown jewel safely and sustainably is a critical part of the plan."
According to data, tourist arrivals on the island have increased gradually since it first reopened its shores to tourists amid the pandemic in June 2020. From 81 tourists in June 2020, Aklan Governor Florencio Miraflores said the number grew to thousands this year. He said arrivals reached around 11,000 in January 2021, with the highest at 26,354 recorded last month. From July 1 to 7, the number is also nearing 7,000.
As Boracay starts inoculating its tourism workers, Romulo-Puyat is hoping the island's ‘dream of a travel bubble’ will soon be realized. "The only way right now that you could do a travel bubble is if the people in the destination themselves, the majority are also vaccinated," she said.
Romulo-Puyat also believes the vaccine rollout for Boracay tourism workers on Wednesday is a step towards attracting more tourists, citing a similar model in Phuket, Thailand, which only reopened to tourists from certain countries when its population was already 70 per cent vaccinated. "We want our tourism front-liners to be vaccinated or whatever, they need to be protected, even if it's RT-PCR or whatever, they need to be protected, they lost their jobs for so long, we need them protected," she said.