CAIRO – One of the world's largest cruise ships, its foreign passengers primed for onshore spending, was supposed to dock in Egypt this month. The port call, however, was scrapped because of security concerns surrounding Mideast protests against a blasphemous film made in the US. Once again, Egyptian tourism, an engine of the national economy and a flagship of the regional industry, has taken a hit. It was another setback for a business that had plummeted in parts of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) last year during the uprisings known as the Arab Spring, then moved toward recovery this year. “Small things become like mountains,” Essam Zeid, an Egyptian tour guide, said of the fallout from unrest in Egypt since authoritarian President Hosni Mubarak was ousted in February 2011. But he also offered a (somewhat) positive metaphor: “We always say that Egypt gets sick but never dies. Recovery is always an option.” Egypt and other Arab nations undergoing turmoil rely heavily on the labor-intensive trade and see it as key to economic growth and social stability. Tourism directly contributes a big chunk of gross domestic product to some of the countries that suffered economic fallout from last year's tumult, which came not long after the global financial crisis. Egypt, for example, generates 6.7 percent of GDP from travel and tourism and Tunisia is around the same level with 6.6 percent, with benefits to related businesses pushing the figures even higher, according to the London-based World Tourism and Travel Council. It is among industry groups that will assess the impact from the latest upheaval, though it is too early for a comprehensive estimate of losses. In the multi-layered Middle East, a setback for tourism in one area can mean a windfall in another. During the Arab Spring, tourists, many of them Arabs, turned away from countries in crisis and traveled to more stable places like Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, said Sana Toukan, Middle East research manager for Euromonitor International, a market research group. The UAE also drew more Chinese visitors, according to Toukan. The latest downturn followed demonstrations in Egypt against the blasphemous film that was produced by a US citizen originally from Egypt. They were part of a wider explosion of anger in Muslim countries. Tharwat Agami, head of the chamber of tourist agencies in Luxor, home to the Valley of the Kings tombs in southern Egypt, reported up to one-quarter of tourist cancelations through October. His own company guided 17 American tourists last week, half of the group's expected number. Royal Caribbean International took no chances. One of its vessels, Mariner of the Seas, can carry more than 3,000 passengers. It left Italy, on Sept. 15 — with regional tension still boiling over the film — and was to call at Alexandria on the northern Egypt Mediterranean coast three days later. The company canceled the layover “in an abundance of caution,” said Cynthia Martinez, director of global corporate communications at Miami-based Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. “Royal Caribbean International continues to closely monitor the situation in Egypt,” Martinez wrote in an email Tuesday. “At this time, Royal Caribbean has not changed the itinerary of any upcoming sailing that includes a port call to Egypt.” Cruise ships also stayed away during the turmoil that led to Mubarak's downfall. Usually, passengers board buses for a day's outing to Cairo, where the pyramids, the medieval citadel, the mummies of the Egyptian Museum and other treasures await. It's a windfall for guides, ticket vendors and souvenir shops. Egyptian tourism revenues fell 30 percent to $9 billion in 2011, but the industry proved as resilient as it is vulnerable. It survived the killing of 62 people, mostly foreign tourists, by militants in a 1997 attack at Luxor that seemed aimed at weakening the government by stopping the flow of tourism revenue. Fueled partly by oil income, Mideast tourism is more diverse and reliant on regional customers. Expatriates and tourists splurge in the glitzy city-state of Dubai in the Arabian Gulf; religious tourism is big in Saudi Arabia; Oman and Jordan are angling for a piece of the medical tourism market. The popular uprisings did not affect Turkey but diverted tourist traffic to the country, now rated sixth in the world in international tourist arrivals. Tourism prospects are a moot point in Syria, which is embroiled in a civil war, and in still-chaotic Libya, where militias roam. “It's not one picture when you look at the Middle East,” said Sandra Carvao, Madrid-based communications coordinator at the World Tourism Organization, a UN agency. “It's a region that has suffered and has proven to bounce back in the past.” Indeed, the agency had deemed the Middle East to be the fastest growing tourism market in the world over the past decade, despite the Iraq war, the 2006 conflict between Israel and Hezbollah and other violence. While some Gulf airlines have gone bankrupt, Carvao compared the expansion of Emirates and Etihad Airways to the rate of growth of Asia's aviation leaders. Amid upheaval and political transition in 2011, according to the agency, international tourist arrivals in the Middle East dropped seven percent to 55.7 million, and in North Africa by nine percent to 17 million. So far this year, the numbers have climbed by nearly one percent and 10.5 percent, respectively. Gladys Haddad, a tour guide in Cairo, said she was pleased that Egypt's new president, Mohamed Morsi, appealed to Italians to visit Egypt when he was in Rome at the height of tension over the anti-Islam film. “I don't think they're going to have like a magic stick to do things right away” to improve tourism, Zeid, the guide who is quick with a metaphor, said of Egypt's fledgling government. “We can't really evaluate their work right now. They have lots of other issues on their agenda.” One thing in their favor, immeasurably, is what lies in Egyptian sands. In its bid to revive tourism, the government this month reopened the Serapeum of Saqqara, a subterranean necropolis where bulls were believed to have been buried in giant sarcophagi. The site was closed for a decade for renovation. One tourist who marveled at Egypt's heritage was Herodotus, the ancient Greek who wrote about Egyptian beliefs and customs, based on what he said he had observed. According to a 19th century translation by a British scholar, he wrote: “Concerning Egypt itself, I shall extend my remarks to a great length, because there is no country that possesses so many wonders, nor any that has such a number of works which defy description.” – AP