Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Nov 28, 2008
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version | Audio | Blogs

News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Industry & Economy - Tourism
Foreign tourists not discouraged

Our Bureau

New Delhi, Nov. 27 For tourists visiting India, it will be a Thanksgiving Day that they will remember for a long time. With some of them taken hostage and others caught in the terror carnage in Mumbai, overseas Governments are asking their nationals in Maharashtra to restrict their movement or return home.

However, tourists are showing the spirit of resilience. Visitors in cities such as Delhi are showing no signs of canceling their itinerary. Some of them are also willing to travel to Mumbai despite the terror drama still being played out. Italian tourist Mr Roberto Pizzolato said, “We will travel to Mumbai tomorrow despite the ground situation not being very favourable.”

Echoing the sentiment, Ms Beatrice Cotrel, a French national, “It is a time for soul searching as terror attacks can happen anywhere. We have not come to sit in our hotel room, we will explore the city come what may,” she said.

A group of German tourists visiting Udaipur said, “The perpetrator of terror wants to spread fear. We should not let them think they have achieved their purpose. Travelling even more aggressively is a way to defeat them.”

The hotel industry, however, is not taking any chances. Almost all luxury hotel chains including the Taj, Maurya and Oberoi have put in place ramped up security, which include discouraging uninvited visitors from entering the premises and putting a multi-tier safety net.

The Governments of the US, the UK, France and Australia have also issued travel advisories asking visitors to restrict their movements for the next few days.

According to the Joint Secretary of Federation of Hotels and Restaurants Association of India, Mr T. Nataraajan, the immediate concern for hotels across India is the safety of their guests.

The Indian Association of Tour Operators’ President, Mr Vijay Thakur, noted that the Mumbai incident may lead to slump in tourist arrivals, which has already been facing a downturn due to global slowdown. Last year, five million foreign tourists visited India and inflow was expected to grow at 15-16 per cent. According to an agency estimate, almost 65 per cent of hotel rooms are used by business travellers. About 30,000 rooms are in Mumbai and Delhi and this could fall by up to 85 per cent following the Mumbai incident.

More Stories on : Tourism | Terrorism

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page




Stories in this Section
Careers abound in hospitality sector: Report


Meet focuses on role of solar power in development
Campaign on wheels by differently-abled youth for Kerala’s development
International trade fair generates Rs 10,000-cr biz
Mumbai terror: Day 2
With agony writ large, they await word on colleagues trapped inside
Tracking terror
Mumbai attack: No impact on outsourcing firms’ operations
‘Clients could delay biz visits in short term’
Financial markets closed; banks operate with skeleton staff
Terror attacks may affect rupee in short term
When death came calling
India Inc reacts strongly to Mumbai attacks
18-hour ordeal for Andhra Bank top brass
Terror Engulfs Mumbai
Markets resilient to past attacks
Some feel FIIs may pull out, others don’t
Oberoi damage assessment later
Adani returns to safety from The Taj attack
The power of prayer
Marine Commandos rescue hostages from Taj
Terror in the neighbourhood: Israelis under siege
The day the Taj burned
Cry, my beloved city
Is India’s brand image in jeopardy?
Chronology of recent bomb attacks in India
Terror has no boundaries; cricket takes a back seat
Tourists call in to cancel travel plans
More precautions
India Inc sees short-term setbacks
Security beefed up in Hyderabad
Media cos not in favour of cross-media ownership restrictions
US students, researchers to start coming to India from 2009
Ms Anusha R. Mahesh, Chief Executive, Park Global School of Business Excellence, Chennai; Stella Maris College
Totem Infra to raise funds for expansion
`FDI inflows to remain robust'
‘Lay offs, not an intelligent option’
HPCL, EIL officers to keep away from strike
Coimbatore foundries working at 40-50% capacity
HK tourism board launches initiative for meetings, exhibitions
Foreign tourists not discouraged




Smartbuy



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2008, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line