Chechnya to Try Marketing War Tourism in Bid to Lure Foreign Visitors

Source: BBC

The troubled southern Russian republic of Chechnya is offering military-themed holidays in an unconventional attempt to attract up to 400,000 visitors per year, Eurasia Times reports.

The regional tourism minister, Muslim Baytazev, offered visits to a Chechen special forces detachment.

“Where better than Chechnya to learn how to use weapons and handle military equipment?” asked the Chechen Tour travel agency in the capital, Grozny.

Two separatist wars in the 1990s and early 2000s – when Russian President Vladimir Putin first took office – left more than 100,000 dead and flattened Grozny.

Islamist attacks remain frequent under the repressive regime and homosexual men are mercilessly targeted by the authorities. The so-called Islamic State claimed two strikes in Chechnya during 2019. The group this year claims to have killed a police officer in neighboring Ingushetia.

But Chechnya opened the world’s longest artificial ski slope in 2018 and attracted 160,000 visitors last year. Chechen tourist offices have opened across Russia and in Estonia and Germany.

Simplified e-visas are being offered although citizens from the UK, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the U.S. are not eligible.

In November, a British YouTube influencer was forced to post an apology for offending Chechen women by referring to drinking beer with a female from the predominantly Muslim region.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has named military warlord-turned-statesman Kadyrov a Hero of Russia, explaining that he read an FSB report about eradicating an armed group.

“I said: ‘Nominate your people for state awards.’ And [FSB director Alexander Bortnikov] responded: ‘We didn’t do it, it was Kadyrov and his people.’ I pointed out that I had prohibited him from doing it but he cannot be stopped, he still continues walking into the line of fire,” Putin said, according to Tass. “I don’t sign decrees awarding the Hero of Russia title for no reason.”