แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ Tourism แสดงบทความทั้งหมด
แสดงบทความที่มีป้ายกำกับ Tourism แสดงบทความทั้งหมด

วันศุกร์ที่ 30 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Myanmar : Opening of Overland Border Gates Could Boost Burma Tourism, Investment

Myanmar :  Opening of Overland Border Gates
 Could Boost Burma Tourism, Investment
As of Wednesday, foreign visitors with Burmese visas are allowed to enter and leave Burma overland through four gates along its eastern border with Thailand.
Officials and ethnic representatives said the decision would boost the tourism industry and facilitate foreign investment in ethnic areas and the rest of Burma.
The decision to open up international road travel ends decades-long restrictions introduced by Burma’s previous military government, which was wary of foreign visitors and wanted to limit access to the conflict-ridden ethnic areas along the border.
Foreign nationals can now enter and exit Burma at Tachileik-Mae Sai and Myawaddy-Mae Sot border gates, at the recently-opened crossing Htee Khee-Sunaron and through the Kawthaung-Ranong gate, located at Burma’s most southern point, the Ministry of Immigration and Population announced on Tuesday.
Travelers passing through these gates are allowed to leave via international airports in Rangoon, Naypyidaw and Mandalay, the ministry said, adding that visa on arrival is not available at the border gates.
Minister of Hotels and Tourism Htay Aung reportedly attended an official ceremony at Myawaddy-Mae Sot border crossing on Wednesday to mark its opening for foreign visitors.
The decision is the result of a bilateral agreement between the Burmese and Thai governments, the Tourism Ministry said. Prior to the agreement, visitors were only allowed to travel to Burma by air. One-day visits were possible at three gates, while foreigners could also gain permission to travel for one week in Burma’s Shan State, if they stayed in the vicinity of Tachileik.
Hla Maung Shwe, a presidential advisor at the government-affiliated Myanmar Peace Center, said the decision was made possible by the progress in Burma’s peace process.
“This opening of the border crossings is the fruit of the peace process that we are working on in our country,” he told The Irrawaddy. “Those who enter the country through these gates, they can go out again at any other gate. There are no restrictions,” he said, adding that the move would help boost tourist visits to areas that were hard to reach before and support local livelihoods in ethnic regions.
More than a dozen armed ethnic groups have been fighting decades-long rebellions against Burma’s central government in the mountainous, forested border regions, in order to gain political autonomy and respect for basic human rights.
President Thein Sein’s nominally-civilian, reformist government has reached ceasefire agreements with most groups in the past year and peace talks are ongoing.
Karen, Karenni, Mon and Shan groups in ethnic areas along Burma’s eastern border with Thailand were left impoverished by conflict and isolation. Some ethnic leaders and businesses there said they hoped their region would now benefit economically from an increase in overland tourist and business travelers.
New Mon State Party executive committee member Nai Tala Nyi said the opening of the Myawaddy-Mae Sot crossing to international visitors could boost tourist business in the Mon State capital Moulmein, which is located on one the main roads leading to Rangoon from the border gate.
“It is good for all people that they can travel from the border to here [Moulmein]. I hope it will have good impact for the local people,” he said.
“I feel our Mon people will get similar benefits to the Thai people, who gain good income from tourism industry, if more visitors come to our Mon State,” said Kaung Sein, managing director at Mon Thanakorn Company.
The relaxing of overland travel restrictions would also help the growing number of Thai firms coming to Burma, according to Kaung Sein, whose Moulmein-based firm assists Thai businesses looking to invest in the Daiwei deep-sea port and industrial zone in Mon State.


“As the border opens, there will be more foreign investment,” he said, Then, our migrants workers who are in Thailand, they can come back to work in their own land.”

วันจันทร์ที่ 22 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2556

Vietnam : VN must learn from Thailand to avoid perils of mass tourism !

Vietnam : VN must learn from Thailand 
to avoid perils of mass tourism !
by Julio Benedetti



Have you ever seen the film The Beach? And, if you have, have you ever visited Phi Phi Island in Thailand where the film was shot?
Western tourists – like Leonardo DiCapro's character Richard in the film – seem to have an obsession with finding the most perfectly unspoiled, untouched, off-the-beaten track destinations in which to spend their long-awaited holidays. However, once these magical, new destinations are discovered, word gets out, tourists arrive in droves, and the charm of destination is spoiled for many.
A tourist influx of this type inevitably leads to the creation of a new tourism infrastructure and the growth of new businesses catering to the tourism industry. In time, the destination becomes so popular that everyone looking to take a holiday wants to visit.
Once this happens, many adventurous tourists think twice about returning again the destinations' appeal has been destroyed by mass tourism. No longer is it the same unspoiled place it had once been because its exclusivity and exoticism has been spoiled. The adventurous tourists will move on in search of other captivating destinations to visit. As soon as their next "find" becomes the latest and greatest in tourist destinations, mass tourism is sure to follow.
Alex Garland, the author of the book on which the film The Beach was based, makes a negative, but hard-hitting analogy between tourism and cancer, in the sense that both can share the same cyclical nature of contamination and self-destruction. It is those same tourists who, in search of a paradise on earth, discover untouched places and inadvertently bring about the mass tourism that destroys the appeal that drew them there in the first place.
If you answered yes to my question about visiting Phi Phi Island, then you are likely to agree that life has, ironically, imitated art – in this case the film – on the this Thai island.
Today, day-trippers arrive on the island looking to experience for themselves the tranquility the island is famous for. Unfortunately, throngs of other tourists are also looking to share the same experience. When I visited, many tourists complained to me that their experience was the complete opposite of what they expected and that the feeling of island was not the same as they had heard.
This is the same narrative of self-destruction that The Beach intends us to reflect on. The film arguably inspired Westerners to claim Phi Phi Island a pseudo-paradise, and Phi Phi Island paid a price for the resulting tourist influx. But what does any of this have to do with tourism and Viet Nam?
How long will it last?
Lately, out of curiosity, I have been asking tourists their reasons for wanting to visit Viet Nam. With only slight variations, I often receive the same answers: It's not too touristy, it's cheaper than other places in Asia, it's still unspoiled and quite off-the-beaten track. Indeed, many people will agree that these days, returning home from a visit to Viet Nam sounds much cooler than returning home from a trip to Thailand.
But wasn't Thailand also once cheaper, undiscovered and exotic to many people? Does this mean that Viet Nam will soon follow Thailand by pushing tourism to the point of over-development? Will Viet Nam, like Thailand, begin its own self-destructive cycle like the one Garland spoke of?
It is extremely important that action is taken now, before we hear from tourists years later that Viet Nam has lost some of its appeal. The country should look to Thailand as a model and learn from both the many good aspects of its tourism industry and its many mistakes.
I can't help but remember the tourism slogan adopted by Viet Nam on my first visit two year ago: "The Hidden Charm". It's the perfect bait for attracting western tourists, and it's perfectly true. Viet Nam is incredibly charming and it has all that is needed to make it a successful tourist destination, if properly managed: natural wonders, a rich history and culture, and a diverse and appealing cuisine.
Viet Nam's latest tourism slogan goes like this: "Viet Nam, Timeless Charm". I hope and trust that tourism businesses and authorities in Viet Nam can fulfill this great promise. 

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