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Travel firms told to keep Vietnamese tourists away from casinos
The National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) has
instructed travel firms to follow the nation’s laws and regulations strictly
when they send Vietnamese tourists overseas. The travel firms may not design
tours that include visits to casinos.
The VNAT advisory reported in Thoi Bao Kinh Te Saigon (Saigon Economic News) is
evidently prompted in part by the proliferation of casinos in nearby
destinations, including a number established just over the border in Cambodia.
In the official letter to travel agencies, VNAT General Director Nguyen Van Tuan
told them to avoid bringing Vietnamese tourists to unsafe places. The firms were
told to report to the authority immediately as soon as troubles occur.
VNAT also ordered province and city tourism departments to examine the outbound
tourism operations of travel firms.
VNAT says that some travel firms have been found to provide substandard service
when taking Vietnamese tourists abroad, and there have been incidents relating
to tourists’ safety.
(In February 2010, a party of 22 Vietnamese tourists met an accident on the way
from Pattaya to Bangkok which killed one and injured six.)
Responding to the VNAT directive, travel firms commented that tourists who want
to will still find their way to casinos, whether or not gambling stops are
programmed into a tour. They always have free time in the evening to go whatever
they want.
Nguyen Minh Quyen, Deputy Director of Ben Thanh Tourist, said that few travel
firms include a casino visit in their tour programmes. It is the tourists who
decide whether to go to a casino or not, he added.
The head of a Hanoi travel firm agreed. Despite the ban, he said, tourists will
have no trouble finding a casino to gamble if they want. They can catch a taxi
to one and pay all other expenses themselves, while no one can control their
time.
However, Nguyen Minh Man, a senior executive at Vietravel, said that his company
will work directly with foreign partners to remove casinos from tour
destinations after studying the VNAT directive. Man said that Vietravel and its
partners will identify alternative sites for Vietnamese tourists to visit.
Quyen of Ben Thanh Tourist said that he supports the decision by VNAT to
discourage Vietnamese people from patronizing casinos during their trips abroad.
“It is a kind of waste of foreign currencies,” he explained, “unreasonable when
Vietnam every year has to spend billions dong to advertise Vietnam as a vacation
destination.”
China last year issued a similar directive, forbidding travel agents from taking
Chinese citizens to Vietnam to gamble.
Analysts here comment that the ban on leading Vietnamese tourists to casinos is
just a halfway measure. They point to ads for trips to destinations like Las
Vegas (US), Malaysia’s Genting Highlands and Macau on the websites of some big
travel firms that include text that promises attractive nights at casinos.
For example, one ad notes the ‘chance to enter the night world of Las Vegas
City’, or the ‘chance to discover the biggest casino in South East Asia’ or
‘seek good luck in casinos.’
The 24 hour casinos that have opened on the Cambodian border and in Phnom Penh
and the big casinos in Malaysia and Macau have proven to be very seductive to
Vietnamese tourists.
Source: VietNamNet, TBKTSG |
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