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International tourists excited to return to Binh Thuan

May 19, 2022 by en.vietnamplus.vn Leave a Comment

International tourists excited to return to Binh Thuan hinh anh 1 A group of French tourists visiting Binh Thuan . (Photo: VNA)

Binh Thuan (VNA) – The south-central coastal province of Binh Thuan has welcomed back many groups of international tourists in recent days after a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

A group of 40 French visitors are experiencing an eight-day vacation at The Cliff Resort & Residences in Phan Thiet city.

This is the largest group of tourists the facility has welcomed since it re-opened its door to foreign holidaymakers.

Apart from experiencing services at the resort and enjoying local foods, the tourists are also be guided to visit natural landscapes, historical and cultural relic sites, and join various types of sports at sea.

Since March 15, The Cliff Resort & Residences has welcomed more than 60 foreign visitors.

According to Vice Director of The Cliff Resort & Residences Vo Thuy Loan, the facility only served domestic visitors and foreigners who are living and working in Vietnam in the last two years.

The return of international arrivals, especially large groups, is a good signal for Mui Ne in particular and Binh Thuan in general, she added.

Meanwhile, Aroma Resort in Phan Thiet city has served over 20 foreigners from the UK, Belgium, France and Russia, since the resort resumed its activities.

It is hoped to welcome a number of groups of European tourists in June and July this year.

According to the provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism, all recent arrivals to Mui Ne will create a premise for the locality’s tourism industry to gradually revive in the coming time.

Besides building programmes to stimulate domestic tourism demand, travel firms in Binh Thuan expand connections with international travel businesses to re-start existing tours, and open new ones to attract more foreign arrivals.

In the first four months of 2022, Binh Thuan welcomed nearly 1.4 million tourists, earning about 2.7 trillion VND (over 116.5 million USD) in revenue./.

VNA

Filed Under: Travel COVID-19, binh thuan, tourism, vacation, French visitors, Vietnamplus, Vietnam news, Vietnam News Agency, Travel, ..., Binh Quoi Tourist Village, ks 19 4 binh thuan, International Tourist Arrivals, International Tourists, international tourist destination, international tourist, International Tourist Guide, international returns

International Tiger Day: From Ranthambore to Bandipur, visit these tiger reserves for a thrilling experience

July 29, 2019 by indianexpress.com Leave a Comment

international tiger day, tiger reserves in india, tiger reserves, tiger reserves, tiger reserves, indian express, indian express news Which one are you planning to visit? (Source: File Photo)

Every year on July 29, International Tiger Day is celebrated to raise awareness regarding tiger conservation. Created in 2010 at the Saint Petersburg Tiger Summit, the objective of the day is to create a platform where a global system to protect is achieved, natural habitats of tigers are retained, and awareness is created.

On this day, we have drawn up a list of some of the tiger reserves in India.

ALSO READ | Tiger count likely to rise as conservation efforts ramp up

Jim Corbett Tiger Reserve

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Named after conservationist Jim Corbett, Jim Corbett Tiger Reserve, Uttarakhand was set up in 1936. Housing a wide variety of flora and fauna, this national park is considered as India’s first National Park. It is situated at Patli Dun valley in the state of Uttar Pradesh, and there are five regions Dhikala, Bijrani, Jhirna, Domunda and Sonanadi. Each of these regions offer great tours.

Ranthambore Tiger Reserve

Located in south-eastern Rajasthan, Ranthambore Tiger Reserve covers an expansive wear and is one of the largest national parks in the country. The tiger reserve is famed for its diurnal tigers.

Sunderban Tiger Reserve

Part of the Sundarbans on the Ganges Delta, this is thickly covered by mangrove forests. It is one of the largest reserves for the famous Bengal tiger.

Bandhavgarh National Park

Considered as one of the most famous tiger reserves in India, Bandhavgarh National Park is situated in Madhya Pradesh. If you visit the place, you might even see Royal Bengal Tigers. Needless to say, it attracts a huge number of tourists.

Sariska Tiger Reserve

Situated in the Alwar district, Rajasthan, this was declared as a wildlife reserve in 1955. In 1978, it received the status of a tiger reserve and was reported in 2003 that there were 16 tigers in the reserve. However, by the next year, it was reported that no Bengal tigers could be spotted. Later it was explained by the Rajasthan Forest Department that the tigers had migrated, temporarily outside the reserve. Now, efforts are on to open it to wildlife tourism.

Bandipur National Park

Situated in Karnataka, it is one of the most premier tiger reserves in the country. The place is known for its wildlife and the thick decidious forests.

Which one are you planning to visit?

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South Korea’s Banwol Island draws more tourists after going purple

February 19, 2021 by www.foxnews.com Leave a Comment

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If purple is your favorite color, you’re really going to love it here.

Banwol Island in South Korea is trending an Instagram-worthy day trip destination for its eclectic violet theme, drawing thousands of domestic visitors as international travel is restricted during the coronavirus pandemic.

Shades of the secondary hue dominate the isle in the South Jeolla Province, as seen across 400 purple rooftops.

Shades of the secondary hue dominate the isle in the South Jeolla Province, as seen across 400 purple rooftops. (Visit Korea/YouTube)

Shades of the secondary hue dominate the isle in the South Jeolla Province, from 400 purple rooftops to acres of lavender flowers and a picture-perfect, bright purple bridge. The Korea Travel Post reports that even signage and restaurant serveware throughout the “half-moon island” are purple, too.

TED CRUZ TAKES ILL-FATED CANCUN TRIP AS TOURISM AT MEXICO HOTSPOT EDGES TOWARDS PRE-PANDEMIC LEVELS

Only about 150 people live on Banwol and the neighboring Bakji Island, many of whom work in agriculture.

Only about 150 people live on Banwol and the neighboring Bakji Island, many of whom work in agriculture. (Visit Korea/YouTube)

According to The Sun, the purple paradise’s transformation began in 2015. Authorities painted 400 rooftops purple, also planting 230,000 square feet of lavender and 30,000 purple New England wildflowers. In a bid to boost tourism, a hotel, restaurant, café and bike rental shop have also opened their doors for business. Only about 150 people live on Banwol and the neighboring Bakji Island, many of whom work in agriculture.

Banwol finally shot to stardom this summer, with over 100,000 people reportedly visiting between June and August 2020, up 20% from the year prior, as people stuck closer to home in the fight against COVID-19 and looked for local amusements.

Well into the New Year, the plump paradise continues to trend. 

Well into the New Year, the plump paradise continues to trend. (Visit Korea/YouTube)

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Well into the New Year, the plump paradise continues to trend. As seen on Instagram, a particularly popular place for a picture is the Cheonsa Bridge, which connects Banwol with Bakji.

Like an up and coming attraction, admission is charged – Travel Post reports that it costs about $2.70 per adult to enter Banwol Island.

Janine Puhak is an editor for Fox News Lifestyle.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Jeju Island in South Korea, Cheju Island in South Korea, Tourists in South Korea, When to Go to South Korea, South Korea Jeju Island, South Korea Tourists

Will international stress disrupt Vietnam’s economic recovery?

May 20, 2022 by vir.com.vn Leave a Comment

Will international stress disrupt Vietnam’s economic recovery?
Patrick Lenain-Former assistant director Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

Pressures on global supply chains are also a key headwind in the recovery. Supply chain disruptions are not new: health precautions imposed over the last two years have already caused major bottlenecks. Major shipping hubs such as Los Angeles and Shanghai have operated with reduced capacity, with long waiting times to get shipments processed across the borders.

With the pandemic fading away, congestion in international supply chains has eased a bit since December 2021. In the United States, government agencies have worked with shippers, retailers, and port authorities to speed up the movement of goods.

For instance, ships waiting to unload containers in US ports have declined by 35 per cent, thanks to 24/7 operations and large recruitment of workers. However, the lack of US truck drivers has emerged as a new problem. Action was taken to hire 30,000 additional truck drivers, including apprentices, women and veterans – all with higher salaries.

The problem then became the lack of trucks, as critical components are impeding the assembly of new trucks in factories. Similar problems have been faced around the world.

Though the situation has improved around the world, containers are still moving too slowly.

An index compiled by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (see Figure 1) shows that global supply chains remain stressed relative to pre-pandemic levels, and similar indicators put together by ABN-AMRO and the US Department of Transportation reach similar conclusions.

Differing policies

Vietnam’s exports of goods to the United States reached $96.29 billion last year, up 24.9 per cent on-year, so Vietnamese businesses will welcome that the situation is slowly improving in this country. However, the situation has worsened in China – the country’s second-largest foreign market with exports of $56 billion in 2021, up 14.5 per cent on-year. Coronavirus outbreaks in dozens of Chinese cities have prompted the return of strict lockdowns.

Most countries have by now decided to live with COVID-19 and allow the coronavirus to circulate almost freely, but China still adheres to its “zero-COVID” policy. Over 300 million Chinese citizens have been told to remain indoors for more than a month, with strict rules for getting access to daily necessities.

In Shanghai, one of the busiest manufacturing hubs in the world, this has created severe logistical problems. A backlog of ships is waiting to unload cargo. Once unloaded, logistical challenges are getting trucks and drivers to pick up the containers and move them out of the harbour. Drivers need to take frequent COVID-19 tests, face lengthy quarantines, and must obey clearance times to enter Shanghai. Some products require special licensing requirements, such as food items. All these procedures have raised the cost of shipping a container to and from China multiple times – with an impact on business profitability.

Even crossing the China-Vietnam land border has become a challenge faced daily by hundreds of truckers. Chinese authorities have prohibited Vietnamese truck drivers from crossing the frontier, so shipments need to be offloaded, decontaminated, and reloaded on Chinese trucks – all with staff in full protective equipment.

China’s lockdowns will eventually be relaxed. However, clearing up piles of stranded containers will take time, and strict lockdowns may happen again as long as China retains its policy.

Vietnam could draw lessons from other countries and reduce logistical stress. Like in the United States, a task force could be established involving Vietnamese authorities, customs, shippers, businesses, and retailers to agree on practical solutions. Introducing 24/7 operations at the borders, including holidays, will help to process more shipments and clear up logjams. Using digital declarations and online submissions will expedite formalities.

Businesses may not be able to cover the additional costs of these procedures, so government financial support is warranted, as done by the US Department of Transportation’s decision to provide funds amounting to $450 million to ease bottlenecks.

Nonetheless, disruptions will not go away entirely, so businesses should be prepared: stockpiling essential inputs will be preferable to relying on just-time-delivery; exploring new delivery routes with different border crossings will be better than using a single pathway; diversifying the customer base in different countries and provinces will also build resilience in the face of future disruptions.

Will international stress disrupt Vietnam’s economic recovery?
Stress in global supply chains has declined, but remains elevated

Conflicts and reopenings

The Russia-Ukraine military conflict is also a threat to global recovery. For Vietnamese businesses, the conflict may seem far away, but it is a direct hit on them. Before the conflict, Russia and Ukraine were large suppliers of various types of energy and grain to global markets. With the availability of Russian and Ukrainian products now much reduced, commodity prices have skyrocketed.

Even though Vietnam is a large producer of energy and food staples, it nonetheless imports large quantities of oil, coal, natural gas, fertilisers, iron, steel, aluminum, and agricultural commodities. For Vietnamese businesses using these items, this means higher input costs, which cannot always be fully passed on to sales prices paid by customers, thus hurting profitability.

The conflict has also disrupted international shipping: military forces have shut off shipping lanes in parts of the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov. The airspace over Ukraine is now closed to civilian airlines, and the airspace over Russia is avoided by them. This has decreased the capacity of international airfreight carriers, which are required to take alternate, longer routes, pushing up fuel costs. Spiking airfreight rates will be felt by Vietnamese businesses flying products to the region.

Furthermore, Western countries imposed sanctions, with global repercussions. Many of Russia’s commercial banks have been locked out of the SWIFT international payment system, which connects more than 11,000 banks and financial institutions in over 200 countries and territories. This has made it very complicated to make and receive payments from Russia, affecting bilateral trade between the two countries.

Elsewhere, tourism accounted for 9.2 per cent of GDP before the pandemic, but COVID-19 has crushed it to only two per cent. Hopes are high that the reopening of borders will see a fast return of international visitors, but disruptions caused by China’s strict confinement rules and by the Russia-Ukraine conflict will hurt.

Almost six million Chinese tourists were visiting Vietnam annually before the pandemic, the largest foreign group. China’s authorities have banned Chinese travel agents from selling outbound group and package travel since January 2020, and this ban was last reiterated in a press conference in March this year. Restrictions on returning to China are also very tight, including quarantine-on-arrival and health monitoring at home, making international travel impractical.

Over 600,000 Russians were visiting Vietnam annually before the pandemic, another important group. Since late February, Vietnam airlines and Aeroflot have cancelled direct flights between the two countries. In addition, Russian tourists can no longer use their Visa, Mastercard, and American Express cards when travelling abroad. Other options are available, such as Russia’s Mir card, but with limited acceptability.

Despite this, Vietnam’s tourism sector has a bright future. Other touristic hubs previously hit by crises – such as Egypt, France, Greece, Morocco, and Tunisia – were able to rebound. Vietnam’s government can help the travel industry explore new markets and adapt its marketing actions to cater to tourists with different tastes, interests, and languages.

By Patrick Lenain

Filed Under: Uncategorized global supply chains, supply chains, Vietnam’s economic, Investing, supply..., zimbabwe democracy and economic recovery act, zimbabwe democracy and economic recovery act of 2001, 1981 economic recovery tax act, who economic recovery, austerity vs stimulus the political future of economic recovery, postwar britain’s economic recovery was based on, exiled spaniards lured home by economic recovery, exiled spaniards lured home by robust economic recovery, stress disrupts the performance of, post recession economic recovery

Forum held on digital transformation for sustainable tourism

May 19, 2022 by vietnamnews.vn Leave a Comment

HÀ NỘI — The tourism sector must apply digital transformation to secure sustainable development, according to dozens of participants at a forum on the topic held in Hà Nội on May 18.

Titled “Green Light for Tourism to Take Off Part 2: Digital Transformation: Diving Force for Sustainable Development”, the forum gathered dozens of experts from State management agencies, tourism authorities, localities, and IT.

The first part of the forum held in March focused on opening doors to international tourists.

Hoàng Quang Phòng, deputy chairman of the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce Industry, said at the end of 2018, the Prime Minister issued Decision No 1671/QĐ-TTg approving the “Master plan on applying informatics technology in the tourism field for 2018-2020, with orientation to 2025.”

“Informatics technology has been applied in various tourism companies, especially hotels, resorts and big travel agencies,” Phòng said.

A visitor uses a remote guide app on her mobile at the National Fine Arts Museum. —VNS Photo Lê Hương

However, he said there had been no uniform application in the whole sector.

Phòng noted that the pandemic had seen the biggest ever purge in the field.

“Digital transformation has been proved to be crucial to all the fields if they want to move forward in the Fourth Industry Revolution,” he said.

“The pandemic has pushed all tourism companies and localities to choose: digital transformation or die.”

Digital transformation has helped tourism enterprises flexibly react to the changes in the market, he said. Based on available data, tourism workers could still communicate with customers to understand their psychology, behaviours and demands to introduce suitable products.

Phòng said not only enterprises but also locations needed to go through digital transformation to bring convenient and safe experiences to customers, like remote guide systems, QR codes introducing displayed objects, and automatic facilities to help customers send comments on service quality to managing boards.

“We can see that the tourism sector has been active in digital transformation and the Fourth Industry Revolution, aiming to form a smart tourism ecology linking participants from tourists, service providers to State management agencies, he said.

Nguyễn Lê Phúc, deputy general director of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT), shared the same idea that digital transformation will bring an opportunity for the tourism sector to develop more sustainably.

Phúc said in the past few months, the VNAT has concentrated on establishing a smart tourism ecology to create a “common playground” for localities and enterprises.

The VNAT has built a data system for Vietnamese tourism; established information connections among management agencies, localities and enterprises; applied technology to ensure safe tourism; pushed up the use of apps among management agencies, enterprises and tourists like the apps including “Safe Việt Nam Tourism,” “Việt Nam Travel Guide,” and “COVID-19 Registration & Safety Judgement;” and supported localities and destinations to embrace digital transformation, such as Hà Giang Province and Thanh Hóa Province in 2021.

At the same forum, other experts in IT and tourism admitted that digital transformation was now crucial as tourist habits had changed.

More and more tourists have been booking services online.

Nguyễn Quyết Tâm, director of Vietso, also the founder of TravelMasters, held that to build the foundation for digital transformation, first and foremost, the tourism sector should have a common technical criteria system so that different platforms can share data.

“Data built at localities and enterprises are not following any same standard,” he said.

The VNAT has noted the opinion and will gradually complete the common platform on tourism business management, which is scheduled to be launched in December.

The mobile app Việt Nam Tourism has been introduced at all hotels in the country. —VNS Photo Mạnh Trí

Enterprises need more support

Đỗ Hồng Xoan, chairperson of the Việt Nam Hotels Association, said three-quarters of tourism enterprises are small and medium-sized and need more support in the process.

“Small and medium-sized enterprises have been bogged down with various difficulties as digital transformation should be uniformed across State policies, ministry decisions, VNAT policies, association policies, and locality policies,” she said.

“They need more help from agencies to apply the digital transformation,” she said.

The Selection for National Distinguished Tourism Service Providers 2022 was launched at the same forum to praise enterprises making considerable contributions to tourism market development. All tourists and enterprises throughout the country can cast their votes.

The Diễn đàn Doanh nghiệp magazine, based on judgements of experts in the field, will announce the result and hand the certifications to top selected tourism enterprises later this year. — VNS

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