The Prague Post - Tunisia sets sights on becoming world's top seawater therapy spot

EUR -
AED 4.172917
AFN 81.50154
ALL 97.989987
AMD 443.230591
ANG 2.047603
AOA 1041.814447
ARS 1253.142536
AUD 1.780407
AWG 2.045001
AZN 1.932159
BAM 1.934005
BBD 2.293751
BDT 138.034457
BGN 1.958294
BHD 0.428186
BIF 3378.03215
BMD 1.136112
BND 1.48558
BOB 7.850121
BRL 6.500147
BSD 1.136097
BTN 96.726012
BWP 15.520235
BYN 3.714837
BYR 22267.792932
BZD 2.281984
CAD 1.572532
CDF 3266.321354
CHF 0.937798
CLF 0.0282
CLP 1082.169203
CNY 8.307585
CNH 8.294486
COP 4879.884571
CRC 571.163423
CUC 1.136112
CUP 30.106965
CVE 110.032418
CZK 25.07283
DJF 201.909901
DKK 7.467044
DOP 67.428451
DZD 150.604145
EGP 57.993841
ERN 17.041678
ETB 149.84893
FJD 2.565852
FKP 0.849021
GBP 0.855333
GEL 3.112354
GGP 0.849021
GHS 17.499966
GIP 0.849021
GMD 80.66375
GNF 9833.615506
GTQ 8.751379
GYD 238.32171
HKD 8.814922
HNL 29.323189
HRK 7.540828
HTG 148.595443
HUF 408.410658
IDR 19157.913871
ILS 4.20358
IMP 0.849021
INR 96.833941
IQD 1488.306568
IRR 47844.51429
ISK 144.899565
JEP 0.849021
JMD 180.060851
JOD 0.805846
JPY 161.98285
KES 147.123178
KGS 98.699728
KHR 4562.625321
KMF 487.962488
KPW 1022.569211
KRW 1622.742726
KWD 0.347377
KYD 0.946682
KZT 589.180386
LAK 24540.016782
LBP 101738.819102
LKR 340.700564
LRD 226.597767
LSL 21.222532
LTL 3.354643
LVL 0.687222
LYD 6.174798
MAD 10.494831
MDL 19.432185
MGA 5140.906375
MKD 61.532955
MMK 2385.315489
MNT 4021.754001
MOP 9.076811
MRU 44.989227
MUR 50.567951
MVR 17.501827
MWK 1973.426175
MXN 22.278643
MYR 4.988665
MZN 72.711137
NAD 21.222173
NGN 1824.826521
NIO 41.808846
NOK 11.839297
NPR 154.77085
NZD 1.904488
OMR 0.437424
PAB 1.135929
PEN 4.201907
PGK 4.596728
PHP 64.286866
PKR 319.076784
PLN 4.286551
PYG 9094.511778
QAR 4.136697
RON 4.976565
RSD 115.933518
RUB 92.622793
RWF 1636.755017
SAR 4.261714
SBD 9.471745
SCR 16.144972
SDG 682.233851
SEK 10.926104
SGD 1.492277
SHP 0.892806
SLE 25.846888
SLL 23823.679709
SOS 649.288065
SRD 41.875959
STD 23515.222204
SVC 9.939984
SYP 14771.670967
SZL 21.251009
THB 38.20717
TJS 12.098954
TMT 3.987753
TND 3.383909
TOP 2.660884
TRY 43.495359
TTD 7.716046
TWD 37.020772
TZS 3050.460812
UAH 47.244589
UGX 4158.140919
USD 1.136112
UYU 47.969421
UZS 14672.88495
VES 92.773902
VND 29499.145076
VUV 136.765086
WST 3.16669
XAF 648.613367
XAG 0.034843
XAU 0.00034
XCD 3.0704
XDR 0.806593
XOF 646.447555
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.63127
ZAR 21.129187
ZMK 10226.372375
ZMW 32.347757
ZWL 365.827563
  • CMSC

    0.1700

    21.88

    +0.78%

  • GSK

    0.1800

    36.63

    +0.49%

  • BP

    0.7900

    28.87

    +2.74%

  • BTI

    0.2500

    42.8

    +0.58%

  • NGG

    1.4500

    74.35

    +1.95%

  • RIO

    1.1500

    59.62

    +1.93%

  • RBGPF

    0.1400

    63.59

    +0.22%

  • BCC

    2.2300

    93.03

    +2.4%

  • SCS

    0.2000

    9.62

    +2.08%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    12.34

    +1.7%

  • AZN

    0.9700

    67.87

    +1.43%

  • CMSD

    0.1900

    22.01

    +0.86%

  • RELX

    1.0300

    53.1

    +1.94%

  • BCE

    -0.1300

    22.25

    -0.58%

  • RYCEF

    0.2900

    9.58

    +3.03%

  • VOD

    0.3500

    9.58

    +3.65%

Tunisia sets sights on becoming world's top seawater therapy spot
Tunisia sets sights on becoming world's top seawater therapy spot / Photo: FETHI BELAID - AFP

Tunisia sets sights on becoming world's top seawater therapy spot

With a Mediterranean coastline, natural thermal springs, clement weather and affordability, Tunisia has become the world's second-largest destination for seawater-based treatments known as thalassotherapy.

Text size:

Now, it is setting its sights on overtaking France to claim the top spot.

"The main advantage of Tunisia is its coast and thalassotherapy," compared with neighbouring countries, said Mario Paolo, an Italian, at the Korbous thermal spa, perched on a hill an hour's drive from the capital, Tunis.

A 78-year-old retiree who has lived in Tunisia for the past five years, Paolo said he frequently visits Tunisian thalassotherapy centres "to get back in shape".

"Enjoying sea water and natural springs is not just leisure but also a therapy," Paolo said after a thyme and rosemary oil massage.

Korbous, a coastal town on the Cap Bon peninsula, has historically been one of Tunisia's hot spots for the therapy, which uses sea water and other marine resources.

Thalassotherapy is an "ancestral heritage" for Tunisians, "since hydrotherapy has existed in Tunisia since antiquity, at the time of the Carthaginians and the Romans," Shahnez Guizani, the head of the National Office of Thermalism (ONTH), told AFP.

Other popular thalassotherapy destinations in the country include Sousse, Hammamet, Monastir, and Djerba, which Tunisian news agency TAP said was named the Mediterranean thalassotherapy capital in 2014 by the World Federation of Hydrotherapy and Climatotherapy.

Rouaa Machat, 22, said she travelled from France to Korbous for a three-day wellness retreat.

"I'm here to enjoy the types of water this beautiful town offers," she said, referring to the use of seawater, spring water, and desalinated water for therapy.

"But I am also here for this," she added, grinning and pointing to the Korbous sea and mountains.

Customers mainly come for the quality of spring water, said Raja Haddad, a doctor who heads the thalassotherapy centre at the Royal Tulip Korbous Bay hotel.

Today, Tunisia boasts 60 thalassotherapy centres and 390 spas, 84 percent of which are located in hotels, according to the ONTH.

Tourism accounts for seven percent of the country's GDP and provides nearly half a million jobs, according to official figures.

The sector has seen a decade of setbacks due to terrorist attacks and later the COVID-19 pandemic.

But it has been recovering again as the number of foreign visitors exceeded 10 million last year -- a record for the country of 12 million people.

- 'Palm trees and the sun' -

Guizani said thalassotherapy on its own draws about 1.2 million foreign visitors a year, with "70 percent coming from Europe, including 40 percent from France".

The industry generates approximately 200 million dinars ($63 million, 60 million euros) per year, she added.

That compares with a French thalassotherapy market valued at around 100 million euros last year, according to market research firm Businesscoot.

At a luxury hotel near Monastir, a thalassotherapy centre buzzes with customers despite the cold winter season.

Visitors have come from France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Canada, among other countries.

"As soon as you arrive, you find palm trees and the sun," said Monique Dicrocco, a 65-year-old French tourist. "It's pure happiness, and it's also worth your money."

"Here the therapy is much cheaper than in France, with 1,000 euros a week all inclusive instead of 3,000," she added.

Jean-Pierre Ferrante, 64, from Cannes, said he found "the quality of the water and the facilities just as good as in France".

Kaouther Meddeb, head of the thalassotherapy and spa centre at the Royal Elyssa Hotel in Monastir, said the number of clients has been growing lately.

Yet despite meeting international standards, the sector remains underappreciated in Tunisia, she said.

"There's a lack of communication and promotion," she added.

Experts say more investment is needed in infrastructure. This includes road improvements and air services, they say, as there are few low-cost flights.

But plans are already underway to develop eco-friendly thermal resorts in regions like Beni M'tir, a mountainous village in the northwest, and near Lake Ichkeul south of Bizerte, said Guizani.

"With all the advantages it has, Tunisia is poised to become the world leader in thalassotherapy," she added.

G.Turek--TPP