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Tourist visits to France in 2015 hit record despite terrorist attacks

Official figures show 84.5 million tourists last year visited continental France, the world's leading tourist destination, up by 0.9% on 2014.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

The overall number of tourists visiting France in 2015 rose marginally compared with the year before to reach an all-time high despite the two deadly attacks in Paris in January and November, reports ABC News.

Government figures released Friday show that 84.5 million tourists visited continental France, an increase of 0.9 percent from 2014. The press office for France's ministry of foreign affairs said the latest figure "was an absolute record."

The November 13th attacks in which 130 people died had a negative impact, with a drop of 15 percent in the numbers of foreign visitors traveling to Paris in the months of November and December. Before that massacre, two shooters had stormed the office of a satirical newspaper in January, killing a dozen people.

After a 1.8 percent increase over the first three quarters, there was a 3.1 percent drop at national level in the last quarter.

"The attacks that hit Paris in November have restricted this increase, particularly in the capital," French foreign affairs minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said. "My goal remains to welcome 100 million foreign tourists every year in France from 2020."

Paris tourism took a hit in the weeks following the violence. State statistics agency Insee said earlier this year that hotel occupancy in the French capital dropped by 25 percent in the two weeks that followed the attacks, compared with November 2014. Air France estimated the attacks caused 120 million euros ($130 million) in lost revenue.

But French authorities note that the country remains the world's leading tourist destination, with hotel stays going up 0.8 percent across France in 2015.

Read more of this AP report published by ABC News.