“The tourists from Ukraine will flock to the Crimean resorts. We are expecting an increase in tourist flow. Many [Ukrainian] people have ties with Crimea in terms of family and business,” the minister said.
Only extraordinary circumstances can undermine the tourist flow, such as the border closure by the Ukrainian authorities, the official added, pointing out that he hoped it would not happen.
The Crimean authorities are taking steps to boost the tourist industry on the peninsula, having increased the number of operating beaches to 500 in comparison with 368 beaches in 2016, Strelbitsky said.
Crimea is expecting approximately six million tourists in 2017, the head of the Russian region, Sergey Aksenov, said in March.
According to the Crimean Resorts and Tourism Ministry, over 5.6 million tourists visited the peninsula in 2016, showing a 21-percent increase in comparison to the previous year.