The surprising places where tourism is growing fastest – Telegraph.co.uk

All hail Sierra Leone

The worlds fastest growing travel destination? According to the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), its Sierra Leone.

The little West African nation welcomed 310 per cent more overseas arrivals in 2016, compared with the previous year, a steep rise that was no doubt helped by the country being declared Ebola-free in November 2015.

Just 24,000 people visited Sierra Leone in 2015; while UNWTO doesnt have complete data for the year, that is expected to reach 74,400 for 2016 once all the sums have been done.

Small numbers, of course (South Africa, the continents biggest draw, lured more than 10 million holidaymakers last year), but its a start.

What does Sierra Leone have to offer? Amazing beaches, idyllic villages and smiling people, says Gunnar Garfors, who has visited every single country on Earth and rates it among his 12 favourites.

Its also an unlikely option for cycle tourism - the West Africa Cycle Challenge takes riders from Bo, Sierra Leone, to Monrovia, Liberia, raising money for the charity Street Child along the way.

A whopping 17.2 million people visited South Korea in 2016 up from just 13.2m in 2015 (thats a rise of 30.3 per cent). Only Sierra Leone, Nepal (which suffered a big drop in visitors after the 2015 earthquake), and Iceland have seen sharper increases.

The country's greatest attractions are its chaotic and vibrant capital, Seoul, and the island ofJeju. Unesco-listed, and billed as South Koreas answer to Hawaii, it's pure Instagram gold, and home to dramatic volcanic landscapes, underground caves, hiking trails and scenic beaches.

Only two countries in Europe (San Marino and Liechtenstein) receive fewer visitors than Moldova but things are going in the right direction. Around 121,000 people went there in 2016, compared with 94,000 the year before. What does it offer?

Orheiul Vechi is a crumbling open-air monastic complex that dates back more than 2,000 years; it is home to an impressive array of birds, with roughly 300 different species calling it home; and its capital, Chisinau, has some truly brutal Soviet-era architecture.

OK, so Kiribati was hardly overwhelmed with visitors last year. Around 5,000 people made the long trek to this Pacific nation, which is comprised of 33 coral atolls stretching along the equator, but thats a 21.6 per cent increase on the previous year.

Second World War battles were fought along the shores of its capital South Tarawa - but today its principle draws for tourists include fishing, diving and private islands.

The worlds fourth biggest island celebrated its independence day this week, and the countrys tourism chiefs will have also been toasting a successful 2016, during which it welcomed 293,000 travellers - up 20 per cent from 244,000 in 2015. Why go? Because its a paradise for wildlife lovers.

According to Conservation International, just 17 countries are considered "megadiverse". Each possesses a vast number of different species many found nowhere else. And Madagascar is one.

Among its resident animals are more than half the worlds chameleons and dozens of species of lemur. Unlike the film Madagascar, however, you wont see any tigers, giraffes or hippo.

Largely overshadowed by its neighbours Poland, Czech Republic, Austria and Hungary, which each received more than 10 million tourists last year, Slovakia has some ground to make up. But arrivals rose by an estimated 16.9 per cent in 2016, so its on the right track.

The countrys big draw is the Tatra Mountains. The highest range in the Carpathians, they form a natural border between Slovakia and Poland, are a designated Unesco Biosphere Reserve, and contain some 100 high altitude lakes and a clutch of waterfalls. They can be explored on a number of hiking paths.

There is a raw, magical quality to the Tatra Mountains: a sense of living folklore, wrote Rosemary Griffith, a Telegraph Travel reader, after a visit in 2013.

The air is almost metallic in its purity, the pastures a brilliant shade of green. Houses nestle on the slopes, their red roofs steep and long to accommodate heavy snow. Wild boar, wolves and brown bears roam the forests.

Turkey

Given that it shares a border with Syria, and that terrorist attacks have happened with worrying regularity in its major cities, it is no surprise that Turkey has suffered a big drop in visitors. Almost 40 million went in 2015 that fell by 28.5 per cent to an estimated 28.2 million last year.

Egypt

For similar reasons, Egypt has suffered in recent years. While 14.1 million travellers went there in 2010, that fell to 9.1 million in 2015, and, while UNWTO doesnt have figures for all of 2016, is expected to drop a further 42.1 per cent to around 5.35 million for 2016.

Belgium

The Brussels attacks of March 2016 hit Belgium hard, with tourist arrivals falling 13.2 per cent. That means total numbers for last year will be around 7.3 million - down from 8.1 million.

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The surprising places where tourism is growing fastest - Telegraph.co.uk

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