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News from
The Myanmar Time October 17 -23, 2005
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Looking
beyond short-term considerations
MYANMAR is looking beyond short-term considerations in
promoting its tourism industry, with a focus on benefiting
not only travellers but also the people who work in the
industry, said leading tourism experts from the government
and private sectors.
Myanmar is also concentrating on ensuring that tourism has
positive effects on the country's natural, social and
cultural environments, they said.
Efforts to promote travel to Myanmar have been stepped up in
the past decade as the country has begun to realise that the
tourism sector is one of the biggest generators of money and
jobs in the world.
Statistics issued by the Ministry of Hotels and Tourism
earlier this year show that the number of tourist arrivals
has increased by about 50 per cent in the past five years.
The statistics, which are posted on the ministry's website,
show that the total number of tourists who visited Myanmar
increased from 416,344 in 2000 to 656,910 last year. They
also indicate that more than 280,000 tourists visited during
the first five months of this year.
As the peak 2005-2006.. tourist season-draws closer,' the
ministry said it expects an increase in the number to
tourist arrivals from last season.
"We have a high expectation that the number of tourists
visiting Myanmar during the upcoming tourist peak season
[from October to May] will be higher than last season," said
a statement from the ministry that was issued to the Myanmar
Times on September 14.
"Genuine tourists like our tourism product. . . especially
our intangible hospitality," the statement said.
Myanmar's status as one of a safest travel destination in
Asia has also boosted the potential for growth in the coming
season.
"Security is the basic consideration in choosing a travel
destination. We place high emphasis on the security of our
citizens as well as of travellers to our country," the
statement said.
It predicted that the number of travellers from Europe and
the United States would increase during the coming season.
The statement said that for term, the government has been
promoting nature based tourism to bring the benefits of the
travel sector to the country's rural population.
It said office government's policy of developing the industry
gradually would help to avoid the negative impacts of
tourism.
"That is how we can achieve sustainable development in
tourism," the statement said.
The ministry said it believes that one of the most popular
travel destinations in the country, the Inle Lake region in
Shan State, will attract more visitors this year as tourist
facilities in the region have improved in the past year.
A sales manager at the Inle Resort Hotel, Daw San San said
the hotel has already received bookings for 80 per cent of
its rooms through the peak season.
She said the resort, which has facilities equivalent to
those in a five-star hotel, opened in July with 30 rooms and
has plans to double its capacity by the 2006-2007 peak
season as the tourism prospects in the country increase.
The World Travel and Tourism Council, a London-based tourism
think-tank, predicted that Myanmar would experience a 0.8
per cent increase in tourist numbers this year, with a 1.1
per cent annual increase from 2006 to 2015.
A report issued by the council earlier this year said the
tourism industry will directly or indirectly benefit more
than 650,000 people in the country this year.
The chairman of the non-governmental Myanmar Hotelier
Association, U Khin Shwe, told the Myanmar Times on
September 22 that expanding the amount of accommodation and
improving services in the country would help increase the
number of tourist arrivals.
"Facilities and services are improving in our hotels, and we
seriously count on. our warm hospitality to gain a
competitive edge over hotels in other countries," he said,
adding that he believed there could be a 25 per cent
increase in tourist arrivals this year compared with last
year.
He said the increasing quantity and improving facilities of
hotels in Myanmar serve as a good platform for the country's
tourism promotion campaign.
"But we also need to increase flight frequencies and expand
the passenger handling capacity at our airports, as well as
improve transportation facilities, to see growth in the
number of tourists," U Khin Shwe said.
"We need more tourists for tourism-related businesses to
grow, but at the same time we need to control the number of
visitors until we can establish the facilities to handle a
huge influx," he said.
Daw Su Su Tin, the managing director of Exotissimo Travel
Myanmar, one of the biggest tour operators in the country,
said bookings at her agency for the 2005-2006 season were 10
per cent higher than during the same period last year.
"We are able to accept more bookings for this sea¬ son as
the number of domestic airlines has increased, and as more
hotels have opened in the Inle Lake region and at Ngapali
Beach," she said.
She said bookings from Germany and France in particular have
increased at her agency for the upcoming season.
Daw Su Su Tin said one reason for the growing interest in
travelling to Myanmar was the inauguration of a concerted
campaign to advertise the country's tourism potential.
As part of this campaign, the Myanmar Marketing Committee, a
private-sector tourism promotion agency, has organized
familiarization trips for tour operators from across the
globe.
Daw Su Su Tin, who is a senior member of the committee, said
the program was launches four year as more than 100 tour
operators from Europe, the US and Russia visited Myanmar.
The trips are offered in May and September at a discount of
more than 50 per cent Off the normal cost.
U Phone Thant, a spokes person for the non-government Union
of Myanmar Travel Association, said the association believes
that the development of the tourism industry also depends a
great deal on increasing the number of visitors during the
off-peak season.
He said central Myanmar, which receives less rain than other
parts of the country, can be visited throughout year, a fact
that the association is trying to bring to the attention of
international travel agents and travel writers by holding
talks with them.
"The most widely used tour books continue to publicize
Myanmar as only a dry season destination," he said.
News from
The Myanmar Time October 17 -23, 2005
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