• Maritime police on patrol on the first day of a test-run allowing tourists to return to Boracay. Photos by Mark R Cristano / EPA
    Maritime police on patrol on the first day of a test-run allowing tourists to return to Boracay. Photos by Mark R Cristano / EPA
  • A general view of the beach in Station 3 at the island of Boracay. Rodrigo Duterte said uncontrolled growth turned paradise into a cesspool.
    A general view of the beach in Station 3 at the island of Boracay. Rodrigo Duterte said uncontrolled growth turned paradise into a cesspool.
  • A tourist gets stamped on entry to Boracay.
    A tourist gets stamped on entry to Boracay.
  • People frolic at the beach.
    People frolic at the beach.
  • People frolic at the beach.
    People frolic at the beach.
  • Sunset on Boracay.
    Sunset on Boracay.
  • Hotels will now be responsible for its sewage.
    Hotels will now be responsible for its sewage.
  • People pose for pictures on the Boracay Grotto also known as 'Willy's Rock'.
    People pose for pictures on the Boracay Grotto also known as 'Willy's Rock'.
  • The Boracay Pirates Ultimate team practise on the beach.
    The Boracay Pirates Ultimate team practise on the beach.
  • Tricycles and e-trikes wait for daytrippers.
    Tricycles and e-trikes wait for daytrippers.
  • Day tourists arrive.
    Day tourists arrive.
  • A view of a building under renovation.
    A view of a building under renovation.

Paradise regained: Philippines' Boracay island re-opens for test run - in pictures


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Beach life is slowly returning to Philippines' paradise Boracay island.

The white sandy beach opened to a limited amount of day-trippers on the first of a 10-day test run.

In April, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte ordered the island to close after years of unregulated growth turned paradise into a "cesspool".

Before closure, the 1,000-hectare island drew two million tourists a year, pumping roughly $1 billion in revenue into the economy.

That contributed to a sharp downturn in Philippines growth. However, Mr Duterte said the cleanup was worth it in order to protect the island's fragile ecosystem.

Life will not be the same again on the island. Beach drinking and smoking will be a thing of the past and only 19,000 visitors will be allowed at one time. The number of hotel rooms has also been sharply cut to 6,000 - about half of the current total.

The hotels will now be ow required to put up their own sewage treatment plants, while garbage will be put on a barge every night and shipped across the sea to a landfill, Environment Undersecretary Sherwin Rigor said earlier this month.