[PHNOM PENH POST]
Cambodia is counting on a designation bestowed on its coast to increase
investment in its beachfront, as statistics show an overall double digit
percentage increase in visits to the Kingdom over the first four months
of 2011.
The Kingdom’s 450 kilometre coastline between Koh Kong
and Kep would become the second largest tourist draw behind the Angkor
temples, Minister of Tourism Thong Khon said Tuesday, as he returned
from
Senegal with official recognition that Cambodia’s coast had joined the Most Beautiful Bays in the World club.
The ministry is seeking private investment from developers, aiming to raise incomes through increased tourist visits.
“If the beaches are developed well, our people will earn more money from tourists,” he said.
Along
with having an attractive natural environment, becoming a member of the
club requires the country to show potential for economic development
and have the means of protecting its natural resources, Thong Khon said.
Meanwhile,
the Tourism Working Group for the six Greater Mekong Subregion
countries, including Cambodia, met in Pakse last week, aiming to promote
and develop the tourism industry in the region.
The overall
performance of GMS tourism has been impressive over the past decade, but
its contribution to economic growth and heritage protection is held
back by several constraints, an Asian Development Bank press release
said.
“Some of these constraints include limited institutional
capacity and human resources to plan, develop and manage socially
responsible tourism and safeguard heritage assets,” said Chong Chi Nai,
ADB Country Director to Lao PDR Resident Mission. “GMS countries will
need to make substantial investments in human resources and
infrastructure to sustain tourism growth and manage its negative
impacts.”
More than a million foreign visitors arrived in
Cambodia in the first four months of the year, an increase of 13.2
percent compared to the same period last year, according to statistics
from the Ministry of Tourism.
Vietnam was the largest overall source in foreign arrivals, and increased 13 percent year-over-year.
South
Korean and Chinese tourist numbers were number two and three, with
increases of 22.5 percent and 34.4 percent respectively, the statistics
show.
Thai tourist numbers, however, fell 35.5 percent in the
first four months of the year, according to the statistics. Fighting has
broken out on the Cambodia-Thai border in February and again in April.
“We're not stopping them [Thai tourists] from coming,” Thong Khon said. “We welcome all international visitors to the Kingdom.”
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