A group of tourists look at an elephant at the Yala National Park, some 250km southwest of Colombo

Sri Lanka’s post-war tourism is booming. In the first half of this year, a total of 452,867 people including 85,000 from India, visited the island nation, government data showed yesterday.

This is an all-time high and an 18.7% growth over the same period last year, Xinhua
reported.
The Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority said the highest number of tourists - 172,602 - in the first six months arrived from western Europe.
Britain clocked the highest number of tourists at 47,975, followed by Germany with 32,081.
Despite not having high numbers, the largest growth percentage-wise came from Spain. The percentage of Spanish tourists grew by an impressive 89.2% from 2,058 in 2011 to 3,894 this year.
South Asia also remained a strong market with 116,717 arrivals.
India continued to lead the number of regional travellers with 85,426 arrivals in the first half of the year.
Maldives also showed a 6.7% growth with 20,602 tourists, the tourism authority said in its monthly bulletin.
Tourists from East Asia grew 36.7% from 41,340 in 2011 to 56,497.
The number of arrivals from Japan increased by 29.4% to 10,203, while China reached 9,622 arrivals posting a 11.7% increase from 8,613 in 2011.
The Sri Lankan government has set an ambitious target of 1mn arrivals for 2012, and expects it to rise to 2.5mn by 2016. Around $2bn in earnings are also expected from the tourism industry this year. IANS