Why
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To add insult to injury, the
increasing numbers of outbound tourists suggest that even Vietnamese tourists
prefer to travel to countries other than Vietnam , Binh added.
“Last year only 136,000 Laotians
visited Vietnam while more
than 900,000 Vietnamese visited Laos .”
“We are failing on our home playing
field in attracting holidaymakers as Vietnamese have turned their back on
domestic travel and prefer to spend their holidays abroad,” Binh underscored.
Limiting factors
A combination of global and domestic
factors have diminished Vietnam’s attractiveness as a tourist destination
recently, making the government’s aim of establishing tourism as a strategic
economic pillar more difficult.
International visitors have
routinely reported that unseemly environmental pollution and traffic problems
in major cities like Hanoi and HCM City
have been major concerns hindering the inbound tourism market.
In addition, Vietnam has failed to
step up to the competition from regional countries, Binh stressed— as both
Malaysia and Thailand have similar product offerings competing on cultural
tours and Vietnam has failed to differentiate itself.
Going against the world’s common
trend
Most notably, the Vice President of
the VTA said more should be done to loosen visa regulations as the country
needs to roll out measures to boost tourism with fast visa free policies for
international travellers.
Currently 95% of the world needs a
visa to enter Vietnam
and that goes against the grain of the rest of top tourist countries around
the globe. The government needs to make the nation more readily accessible.
Nguyen Thi Van Anh, director of
Hanoi Red Tours, said Vietnam
has been moving contrary to the direction the rest of the developed world’s
tourism industry is moving.
Other countries in Southeast Asia
such as Thailand , Singapore and the Philippines dole out visa
exemptions to visitors from more than 150 countries. In contrast, Vietnam
imposes strict visa requirements.
Moreover, Vietnam ’s visa procedures are
overly complicated requiring completion of in excess of 10 documents and
papers that much to the chagrin of travellers need to be certified.
Tran Khang Thuy, director of EXO
travel, says most tourists even have had to give money under the table to the
staff at embassies and of the Vietnam
government to procure visas.
Thuy affirmed the complex visa
requirements and related corruption in Vietnam negatively impact the
image of the nation and the domestic tourism industry in particular.
Finding solutions
With its natural splendour and
ancient history, Vietnam
has marketed itself as a hotspot for cultural tourism. However, to entice
more visitors, Vietnam
needs to rebrand itself and learn the lessons from European cities like London or Berlin .
The nation has modernized and
foreigners need to know it can offer more than just blasé tours of ancient
UNESCO historical sites.
According to Vu The Binh of the VTA
the tourism industry has demonstrably lacked innovation, which has hardly
provided any compelling rationale for foreign tourists to return.
In addition, there has been a
definite lack of co-ordination among promotional activities at the national
and local levels.
Most importantly, Vietnam needs
to formulate a long-term strategy to promote the tourism industry, solving
its pathetically sad environmental pollution track record and traffic safety
issues for tourists if it is too have any chance of a revival.
VOV
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