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Tourism in South Asia faces unprecedented growth, UN agency says

Tourism in South Asia faces unprecedented growth, UN agency says

Lahore, Pakistan
Propelled by peace initiatives between India and Pakistan, such as bus services between the two countries, and general economic health, tourism in South Asia is taking off with unprecedented growth, according to the United Nations tourism agency.

Propelled by peace initiatives between India and Pakistan, such as bus services between the two countries, and general economic health, tourism in South Asia is taking off with unprecedented growth, according to the United Nations tourism agency.

“Travel is the language of peace. Peace is the basis of tourism and tourism also helps build peace,” World Tourism Organization (WTO) Deputy Secretary-General Dawid De Villiers told the annual meeting of the agency’s Commission for South Asia and a subsequent international conference on sustainable tourism in Lahore, Pakistan, last week.

For the first time in the recent history of WTO meetings, an Afghan delegation attended the three-day gathering.

In 2004, international arrivals reached around 8 million with an annual growth rate of as high as 20 per cent. The region achieved an impressive annual average of 6.5 per cent in tourist arrivals between 1990 and 2004, though still lower than the 8.5 per cent rate of growth of northeast Asia.

Delegates felt that the region is now in a stage of general economic health, with India moving forward in terms of government support to tourism, infrastructure improvements and successful marketing and promotion initiatives, and Iran making dramatic advances with visa facilitation and a sharp increase in international visits.

Delegates also spoke highly of the success stories of the Maldives and Sri Lanka in spite of the difficulties faced by them in the aftermath of December’s tsunami disaster.