DidaTravel has entered an agreement with Leonardo Hotels Central Europe, allowing DidaTravel’s B2B buyers to gain real-time inventory to Leonardo Hotels Central Europe’s 15,000 over rooms across 88 properties.
Leonardo Hotels Central Europe’s brands include Leonardo Hotels, Leonardo Royal Hotels, Leonardo Boutique Hotels and NYX Hotels by Leonardo Hotels in destinations like Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania, Spain and Italy.

This partnership will significantly expand the global B2B reach of Leonardo Hotels Central Europe, giving it access to DidaTravel’s 23,000 B2B buyers comprising travel agencies, tour operators, airlines and TMCs based in more than 50 source markets worldwide. Over half of the buyers are based outside of Asia-Pacific.
DidaTravel had announced plans to increase the number of directly contracted hotels to 74,000 by the end of 2022, with over 30 hotel chains already in pipeline.
Rikin Wu, DidaTravel founder and CEO said: “Leonardo Hotels Central Europe is one of the leading hotel chains in the region and we are very pleased to partner with a chain known for its high quality and service standards. We are confident that DidaTravel’s technology, experience and extensive global B2B network will help them attract incremental high-value, international travellers now that safe travel has returned.”
Sandra Dreher, vice president sales & marketing at Leonardo Hotels Central Europe added: “Leonardo Hotels Central Europe is looking forward to the new cooperation with DidaTravel and extending our distribution reach across a wider international pool. We are convinced that our portfolio is an attractive new addition for the extensive network of travel buyers and believe that this agreement will produce further synergies for both partners.”


Prior to his new appointment, Ali was a key member of the pre-opening team of Dream Doha, as director of sales, for Dream Hotel Group’s flagship luxury hotel in Qatar.






















The World Health Organization (WHO) said on May 23 that mass vaccinations are not needed against the monkeypox outbreak that has spread beyond Africa.
Latest reports this week state that there are about 200 confirmed and suspected cases across at least a dozen countries, most of them being in Europe.
The US and the UK are making some vaccines available while Germany is mulling options for vaccinations, isolation and quarantine. On May 23, Belgium ordered mandatory monkeypox quarantine; it is the first country to do so.
A senior official at WHO said measures like good hygiene, safe sexual behaviour, contact tracing and isolation will help control its spread, and noted that the virus does not spread very easily.
In a statement issued May 21, WHO said epidemiological investigations are ongoing, and reported cases have no established travel links to endemic areas. As the situation is evolving and surveillance is expanded in non-endemic countries, WHO expects more cases of monkeypox will be identified.