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Ethnic wellbeing ‘crucial' to tourism
The Tay Nguyen (Central Highlands) provinces should focus on
improving the lives of their ethnic minority communities as a crucial step to
reinvigorating the faltering tourism sector in the region, experts say.
Thriving ethnic minority communities are essential to preserving and developing
the region's unique cultural diversity, they added.
Other challenges that need to be tackled urgently to revive tourism in the
region include extensive deforestation, climate change impacts and the loss of
intangible cultural treasures.
Despite boasting great natural beauty and cultural diversity, tourism growth in
the region only grew by 12 per cent annually in the 2001-10 period.
The number of tourists to the region has not increased significantly during the
past 10 years, and has even dropped in several years, Sai Gon Giai Phong
reported on Saturday.
It quoted Associate Professor Truong Quoc Binh of the Viet Nam Art and Culture
Institute, a member of the National Culture Heritage Committee, as saying the
Central Highlands provinces must work together to preserve all their traditional
values and restore their natural treasures to ensure sustainable socio-economic
development.
Other experts also said the region needed closer linkages and co-operation among
its provinces to revive its tourism sector.
Dr. Le Van Minh of the Institute of Tourism Research and Development said this
would play a vital role in exploiting each province's tourism potential. It
would help develop diverse, high-quality tourism products, thus enhancing the
region's tourism competitiveness, he said.
Vu Van Tu, director of Lam Dong Province's Department of Tourism, Trading and
Investment Promotion, said the Central Highlands region had great potential to
develop eco-tourism.
Each province in the region had unique and special features, therefore, all the
provinces needed to co-operate and create a "tourism product chain that has high
cultural values," Tu said. Lam Dong has worked with other localities like the
coastal south-central region, HCM City and other Central Highlands provinces to
boost tourism, but the linkages we re still not strong enough to fully tap the
potential, he added.
The Central Highlands region comprises five provinces: Kon Tum, Gia Lai, Dak Lak,
Dak Nong and Lam Dong.
These provinces are home to more than 40 ethnic minority communities, making the
region a treasure house of cultural diversity, which coupled with its abundant
natural attractions, presents great tourism potential.
The region boasts numerous picturesque ponds, lakes and waterfalls, primeval
forests and national parks as well as favourable weather all year round.
It also has a number of ancient villages where ethnic minority people like K'Ho,
E De, Jarai, Bahnar, M'Nong and others reside.
The region's Gong culture has already been recognised by the UNESCO as a world
intangible culture heritage.
Source: VietNamNet/VNS |
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