Home-like B&Bs hope to cash-in on tourist influx during games

Avantika Shrivastava New Delhi, Jun 6 (PTI) Hoping to attract a large share of foreign tourists who are expected to flock the country for the Commonwealth Games, owners of bed-and-breakfast establishments are offering an Indian home experience that the tourists may not get during a hotel stay. “I would rather call it a home stay rather than a Bed and Breakfast.

It”s not only about the commercial aspect. I give a lot of personal time including tips for sightseeing, shopping,” says Shalini Shamnath, the owner of a gold-starred B&B at Civil Lines.

She expects the Games to be the “cherry on the cake”. “I am sure that during the Games we will get better business.

Occupancy rate might even be 100 per cent during that time. We do expect better rates from what we normally charge,” she says.

Introduced in Delhi in 2007, the B&B concept aims at provising tourists a taste of authentic Indian culture in a clean and affordable setting. There are around 1,230 ”Gold” and ”Silver” starred rooms registered as on May 23, 2010 in Delhi while the Union Tourism Ministry estimates that there could be around 3,000 such units available for the Games.

Majority of them are located in the posh areas of Golf Links, Defence Colony, Nizamuddin, Jor Bagh, Vasant Kunj and Chanakyapuri. .

World’s oldest temple found in Turkey

Washington, March 20 (ANI): A team of archaeologists has claimed that a temple being excavated in southeastern Turkey is 12,000 years old and is likely the oldest temple ever uncovered in the world.

According to a report by United Press International (UPI), the site was first identified in 1986 when a farmer tilling his field in Sanliurfa found a statuette in the soil.

Since then, archaeologists have uncovered the foundation of the temple built in the Neolithic Age along with carvings of pigs, foxes, snakes, fawns and headless humans.

Officials with the Harran University Archaeology Department have yet to identify the culture that built the temple or their belief system.

German teams were the first to excavate beginning in 1995, but the Turkish Culture and Tourism Ministry placed the site on its first-degree protection list in 2005, taking control of the research.

Prior to this discovery, the world’s oldest known temple was in Malta, dating from 5,000 B.C. (ANI)

15 day Ladakh festival begins

Ladakh (Jammu and Kashmir), Sep 3 (ANI): To attract more tourists, a 15 day long festival commenced in the polo ground of Jammu and Kashmir’s Ladakh region on Tuesday.

Union Tourism and Housing and Urban Poverty Alleviation Minister Kumari Selja, while inaugurating the festival, said that this event would help showcase the rich culture, heritage and lifestyle of Ladakh, as the modern-day tourist is travelling to experience the local culture and heritage and not just for sightseeing.

“Earlier the foreign tourists outnumbered the local tourists, but now even the local domestic tourists have discovered Leh and have outnumbered the foreign tourists. This goes to show that how much our country has to offer, we have so much to offer to each other,” Selja said.

Hoping that Ladakh will soon attract the tourists, Selja said that more proposals like this should be welcomed by the Tourism Ministry to promote Ladakh.

The Tourism Ministry had sanctioned huge amount in the year 2005-07 for development of Ladakh region and a project was also sanctioned for the development of tourist facilities in and around Ladakh.

The colorful Ladakh festival, which emerging as an important event in the tourism calendar of the country, will soon attract the tourists from all over the globe.

“We are trying our best to increase the percentage of tourist inflow in Ladakh every year. We are happy that we have succeeded to a large extent. We hope that more and more tourists come to visit this place in the coming years” said Tourism Minister of State Nasir Ashraf Wani.

Wani added that the tourists there have to act as our brand ambassadors, as we hope that back in their country they will tell their people about the beauty of Ladakh.

“The idea was to extend the tourist season. I am glad that the ministry came up with this idea of starting a festival. After a lapse of twelve years we have now managed to lengthen our tourist season,” said Jammu and Kashmir tourism minister, Nawang Rigzen Jora.

The inaugural event was marked by some spectacular performances of different cultural groups, which were well applauded by the audience. The foreign tourists and some distinguished guests present at the event also joined the mass dance, main attraction of the show.

The Ladakh festival which will last till September 15,2009 has many attractions, which include polo match, music concerts, mask dance, cycle expedition, archery, river rafting and folk songs. (ANI)

Indian tourists to get Malaysian travel visa within a day

Kuala Lumpur, Aug. 25 (ANI): With the Malaysian Tourism Ministry planning to introduce a new facility in order to achieve its one million visitors target, Indian tourists planning to visit Malaysia will now be able to obtain travel visas within a day.

The Star quoted the country’s Tourism Minister Ng Yen Yen, as saying that the Malaysian High Commission in Delhi and its two consulates would shorten the time to process visas to one working day from its current three days.

Her announcement came after a dialogue with travel operators in Chennai.

As part of her ministry’s 1Malaysia campaign, Yen Yen toured five Indian cities – Bangalore, Chennai, Delhi, Hyderabad and Mumbai. (ANI)

Tourism sector gets Rs.1,070 crore

New Delhi, July 6 (IANS) With a view to giving a fillip to the tourism industry, which is witnessing a downturn due to the global meltdown, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee allocated Rs.1,070 crore to the sector in the union budget he presented in parliament Monday.
Mukherjee also announced custom duty exemption for water and snow equipment to boost adventure tourism.

“We welcome the move to exempt custom duty for all water and snow equipment that are used in adventure tourism. It will give a boost to adventure tourism. It was a major demand of the ministry that has been fulfilled,” Tourism Minister Kumari Selja said here while welcoming the budget.

Selja had met the finance minister last month for budgetary sops, which included custom duty waiver for inflatable raft, snow skis, water skis, surf boat, sail board and other water sports equipment.

Also, exemption from service tax has been given to those vehicles bearing contact carriage permit and are plying inter-state and intra-state.

Of the total allocation of Rs.1,070 crore, Rs.304 crore has been allocated for overseas campaigns, as compared to Rs.285 crore last fiscal.

Promoting India abroad is a focus area for the tourism ministry, which plans to organise a series of roadshows to attract foreign tourists.

About 5.36 million foreign tourists visited India in 2008, recording a growth of 5.6 percent over the previous year. But January saw a 17.6 percent dip with only 487,262 arrivals.

In April, some improvement was witnessed, with 370,756 tourists visiting India – a drop of 3.5 percent over the same month the previous year.

Government to announce policy guidelines for promoting health tourism

New Delhi, July 1 (ANI): Union Tourism Minister Kumari Selja on Wednesday said that government would announce new policy guidelines for promoting health tourism to increase the number of foreign tourist arrivals in India.

Selja said this while speaking to media persons on the sidelines of the meeting to discuss the ’100 days Agenda of Tourism Ministry’ in New Delhi on Wednesday.

“Wellness tourism as you know is a new catchword all over world and India has lot to offer. So we will be promoting traditional Ayurveda and Siddha systems and also medical tourism in India has again huge potential,” Selja said.

“We will be organising road shows abroad to attract foreign tourists to our country,” she added.

She mentioned that health tourism road shows would be organised abroad beginning with the Scandinavian countries, in last week of August 2009. (ANI)

Israeli tourism poster withdrawn after complaints

An Israeli tourism poster is being pulled from the London subway after the Syrian Embassy complained that the map on it appeared to show the Golan Heights and Palestinian territories within Israel’s boundaries, officials said on Friday.

Britain’s Advertising Standards Authority received more than 300 complaints about the ad, a promotion for the Israeli Red Sea resort town of Eilat, according to the agency’s spokesman Matt Wilson.

The Syrian Embassy and pro-Palestinian groups complained about it because the featured map appeared to show the territories Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war, the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and the Golan Heights, within the borders of the Jewish state, according to the Israeli Tourism Ministry and the British standards authority.

Syrian Embassy spokesman Jihad Makdissi said the move follows days of lobbying to get rid of the ad, which he called offensive.

Although Israel pulled out of Gaza in 2005, Israel maintains a tight blockade on the narrow strip of land and remains in the West Bank.

Israel’s hold on the Golan Heights, a strategic plateau captured from Syria, is a particularly sensitive issue for Syrians. Damascus has said it will not make peace with Israel until the land is returned.

Proposal to provide Visa-on-arrival to foreign tourists

New Delhi, 22 May (ANI): Foreign tourists may soon find it easy to get an Indian visa as the Tourism Ministry is working on a proposal to grant Visa-on-Arrival facility.

This suggestion has been made to boost the tourism sector in India. The proposal would soon be placed before the union cabinet. Primarily, the scheme would be launched as a pilot project for five years.

According to a senior tourism ministry official, “We are preparing a proposal for the provision of Visa-on-Arrival and we hope that new minister will put the matter before the cabinet.”

This Visa-on-Arrival facility will only be extended to tourists who are coming from countries, which are providing similar facility to Indian tourists. At the moment, the count is of about 60 countries.

Along with this, the government is also working on ensuring safety of tourists in the country as cases of crime against foreign tourist have been reported on a regular basis.

“Security is important with tourists and we are also working on a proposal to raise tourist security force in the country,” the official said. Under this initiative, central government will team up with state governments and provide trained tourist security force. (ANI)

Proposal to provide Visa-on-arrival to foreign tourists

New Delhi, 22 May (ANI): Foreign tourists may soon find it easy to get an Indian visa as the Tourism Ministry is working on a proposal to grant Visa-on-Arrival facility.

This suggestion has been made to boost the tourism sector in India. The proposal would soon be placed before the union cabinet. Primarily, the scheme would be launched as a pilot project for five years.

According to a senior tourism ministry official, “We are preparing a proposal for the provision of Visa-on-Arrival and we hope that new minister will put the matter before the cabinet.”

This Visa-on-Arrival facility will only be extended to tourists who are coming from countries, which are providing similar facility to Indian tourists. At the moment, the count is of about 60 countries.

Along with this, the government is also working on ensuring safety of tourists in the country as cases of crime against foreign tourist have been reported on a regular basis.

“Security is important with tourists and we are also working on a proposal to raise tourist security force in the country,” the official said. Under this initiative, central government will team up with state governments and provide trained tourist security force. (ANI)

Polish climber killed on Mount Dhaulagiri

Kathmandu – A Polish climber was killed in Nepal’s part of the Himalayan mountain range, making him the first casualty of the spring climbing season, the Nepalese government said Thursday.

Piotr Morawski, 37, died after falling into a crevasse on Dhaulagiri on Wednesday, the Tourism Ministry’s Mountaineering Department said.

Morawski was making his way between different camps on the mountain to acclimatize when the accident happened at around 5,600 metres.

The mountain has seen unusual amounts of snow and weather and visibility had been bad at the time of the accident, the ministry said.

The 8,167-metre Dhaulagiri is the world seventh highest peak. It was first scaled by members of a Swiss-Austrian expedition in May 1960.

Nepal’s spring climbing season starts from April and last until the end of May.

The majority of expeditions attempt to reach the summits from mid- to the end of May after spending several weeks on the mountain acclimatizing.

A total of 63 expeditions have received permission to climb mountains in the Nepalese Himalayas in the current season, Tourism Ministry said.

Twenty-five expeditions received permission to climb world’s highest peak, Mount Everest.

Nepal has opened 326 peaks for climbers. (dpa)

Former Israeli president indicted for sex offenses

Former Israeli president indicted for sex offenses Tel Aviv – Former Israeli president Moshe Katsav was indicted in the Tel Aviv Magistrate’s Court Thursday on charges of rape and indecent assault against a complainant who previously worked for him while he was Israel’s minister for tourism.

He was also charged with sexual harassment against an employee who worked at the president’s residence during tenure.

The charges span Katsav’s time at the tourism ministry between 1996 and 1999, and his term as president between 2000 and 2007.

The lengthy indictment accuses Katsav of systematically abusing his power over the complainants in order to force improper relations of a sexual nature.

The prosecution named 56 witnesses, including the complainants and various public figures.

Katsav, 63, resigned he presidency in July 2007 because of the accusations. In 2006 he had complained to the Attorney General that he was being blackmailed by one of his employees, although the following investigations then implicated him in a range of sexual offenses.

He signed a plea bargain in June 2007, that included comparatively mild sexual offenses such as indecent assault and sexual harassment, but withdrew from it in April last year. (dpa)