Beside sparkling Mediterranean waters at the Cypriot resort town of Ayia Napa, the bars are bouncing with foam dance parties as tourist numbers rebound following two tough years of pandemic.
But one key nationality is effectively missing: Russian visitors, as the once lucrative market has been hit by European Union sanctions imposed after Moscow invaded Ukraine.
"This year, we expected 800,000 Russian tourists," said Haris Loizides, head of the Cyprus Hotel Association.
The Russian market "was wiped out from one day to the next," said Christos Angelides, head of the Pancyprian Association of Hotel Managers. "Nobody was prepared for this huge change."
The key tourism sector, which had contributed 2.68 billion euros ($2.72 billion) in 2019, 15 percent of GDP, is still counting the cost of the disastrous years of Covid travel chaos.
In 2019, before the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, a fifth of tourists were Russian -- 782,000 out of 3.9 million -- making it the holiday island's second largest market after Britain.
Operators had hoped this summer would see Russian numbers return to pre-pandemic levels.
- Flight bans, banking sanctions -
Some 18,000 Russians are resident in Cyprus, many in the seaside town of Limassol -- dubbed by some "Moscow on the Med."
"Our hotel is doing well, but others -- who had 100 percent Russian clientele -- are not," said Angelides, who is also manager of the Napa Mermaid Hotel.
Nicosia and Moscow have close political and cultural ties, but when Russia sent troops into Ukraine, the Cypriot parliament unanimously passed a resolution condemning the invasion.
Cyprus, the EU's most easterly member, backed the bloc's actions on Moscow, including a flight ban and sanctions barring some Russian banks from the SWIFT financial system.
The tourism ministry says fewer Russian visitors could mean some $600 million in potential lost earnings.
Overall, tourist arrivals in Cyprus are bouncing back, thanks to strong demand in other key markets following the lifting of coronavirus restrictions.
But that is still 25 percent down on the same period of 2019, when 1.63 million tourists came to Cyprus.
"We have somewhat limited the damage, but it is impossible to replace this huge number of customers," Angelides added.
- 'Big gap' -
In the first half of this year, British tourists made up nearly two-fifths of visitors, followed by Israelis, making up seven percent of visitors, then Poland, Germany and Greece.
But it was still "very difficult to fill the big gap" left by Russian tourists, he added, with industry experts fearing the impact may still worsen, since many Russians previously preferred to visit later in the year.
For Loizides, from the island's Hotel Association, the war in Ukraine has also provided another problem.
Surging global costs of fuel sparked by the conflict have driven electricity prices higher.
"The EU must remedy this situation and help companies, especially at a time when inflation is raging," he added.
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© Agence France-Presse
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