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This article was first published 11 years ago

Tourism growth story losing sheen

Last updated on: March 22, 2013 10:53 IST

Image: Kashmiri vegetable sellers gather at a floating market on Dal Lake in Srinagar.
Photographs: Kamal Kishore/Reuters BS Reporter in New Delhi

Just a month before, the Economic Survey 2012-13 referred to tourism as a big-ticket item with higher growth agenda.

But that theory seems to be falling flat, with the hospitality sector, rather than being the 'goldmine of opportunity', is now staring at a bleak holiday season.

Against the projection of 12 per cent annual growth in foreign tourist arrivals, 2013 is set to see negligible increase, implying loss of foreign exchange, besides an image dent.

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Tourism growth story losing sheen

Image: A view from Taj's Dal View Hotel in Srinagar.
Photographs: Courtesy, The Indian Hotels Company Limited

The industry, already reeling under the blow of the economic slowdown, is set to take brunt of the recent cases of assault on foreign tourists, tension with Sri Lanka and disturbance in Kashmir and the Northeast.

Most countries from where India receives foreign tourists have issued travel advisories to their citizens, cautioning about safety and security in India, many even making a special mention of dos and don'ts for women.

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Tourism growth story losing sheen


Photographs: Kamal Kishore/Reuters

Top source countries for foreign tourists -- the US, UK, Canada, Sri Lanka, Australia and Switzerland -- have all warned their people in varying degrees about travelling to India.

Most Indian places 'under watch' are known tourist destinations.

Among recent infamous incidents, the spotlight fell on Delhi after a medical student was gangraped in a bus, resulting in her death. Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh came under a cloud following cases of assault on foreign tourists -- one in an Agra hotel.

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Tourism growth story losing sheen


Photographs: Reuters

Tourists are avoiding Tamil Nadu, too, for issues linked to Sri Lanka, over which Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam withdrew support to the government earlier this week.

Violence in Kashmir, after Afzal Guru's hanging, has kept the place out of bounds for travellers.

The Northeast has remained a disturbed region for long, and most foreign advisories focus on that.

Other touristy states like Maharashtra, too, have witnessed cases of assault and violence in recent months.

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Tourism growth story losing sheen


Photographs: Reuters

The tourism ministry had set a target of 12 per cent year-on-year growth in tourist inflows in 2012 and planned to double that to 12 million by 2016.

Tourism Minister K Chiranjeevi believes he can still achieve it.

Besides calling for suspension of the 'rating' given to the Agra hotel where a tourist from the UK had to jump from a balcony to prevent an assault by the hotel owner, he has met Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde to seek a system for tourists' safety.

He plans to meet chief ministers, too.

On what should be the road ahead, a bureaucrat says the tourism ministry should liaise with states to also 'tell tourists what's not shining, and what's dark in India'.

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