Other posts related to tourism

Mushrooming Hotel Trade on St Martin’s Island

February 21, 2008 11:46 pm

~story and photo by Belinda Meggitt~

Kids on St. Martin's IslandOriginally published in the New Age, Feb. 13, 2008. More photos available here.

For a country that blossoms with national pride, the majority of Bangladeshis fail to respect the country’s natural wonders.

St Martin’s Island, where once thousands of migratory birds sought refuge, turtles laid eggs and coral grew, now bustles with migratory tourists and growing piles of plastic. Economic development drives tourism, but what tourists and hotel owners fail to acknowledge is their impact. The gold rush of tourism to St Martin’s Island will be short-lived unless changes are made immediately.

Only a few years ago, the island was an ecological refuge. ‘It was the best place for turtle nesting and even schoolchildren protected the nests,’ recalls Elisabeth Mansur, Chief Executive Officer of Guide Tours. ‘The biodiversity was truly amazing.’

Tourists were still able to visit, but it was a form of adventure tourism. The rocky journey – via a country boat crammed with the islands supplies – limited the number of tourists, as did the one beach hut. But the tourists that came were rewarded by natural beauty, an experience that didn’t resemble a Thai beach Mecca. Now, four large vessels ply the crossing daily during high season. Most tourists stay anywhere from three hours to a little over 24. It’s not hard to imagine why the island is disappearing in a state of disrepair.

Mansur says eco-tourism was discussed at length before the hotel explosion in 2005. There was a plan to maintain St Martin’s biodiversity.

‘Private industry sat for many months making a good development plan of how soft-ecotourism and responsible travel could develop,’ says Mansur. ‘But that’s when the government went ahead and opened the land rights for people from the mainland.’

Show me more… »

Interview with Hasan Mansur, President of TOAB

February 1, 2008 3:05 pm

Dhaka - Major Zia Uddin and Hasan MansurHasan Mansur, on right, at the September 2007 Bangladesh Travel and Tourism Fair. Click the photo to see more images from the fair.

Hasan Mansur likes to think of his work as “seeding fertile ground.”

The former agriculturalist was studying in the United States when he met a Swedish gentlemen who, at first, employed him as an impromptu tour operator and fixer.

Mansur would later become the father of Bangladesh’s embryonic tourist industry, after that same Swede employed him around South Asia and gave him all the background and experienced he needed to set up Guide Tours in 1989. Today he is the president of the Tourism Operators Association of Bangladesh (TOAB). He has now stepped back from the day-to-day operations of Guide Tours and is working for the development of the industry and its operators with TOAB.

“It was April 1989,” says Mansur, of the founding of his company. “I thought, let me plant a small tree and if it becomes big, it will provide shade, many people can come around and take shelter.”

Several years later, that tree is still growing and Bangladesh’s domestic tourism industry is now growing steadily.

“I have proven that it is possible to have a tourism business and survive in Bangladesh,” says Mansur.

Today, we bring you a two-part interview with Mansur. First, we get his perspective on how on how the industry needs the government’s help in creating a fruitful tourism market in Bangladesh. Second, we hear the back story of Mansur himself and how he got his start as a tourism operator in Bangladesh.

 
icon for podpress  The Potential of Tourism in Bangladesh [11:03m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (297)

 
icon for podpress  Hasan Mansur - the back story [7:20m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (291)

Please note: If you are located in Bangladesh you may have problems hearing this podcast due to limited bandwidth availability. Please download it first as the player will stop when it reaches the end of the data it has downloaded so far.

Captive Market

January 2, 2008 4:45 pm

Bangladesh will become a traveler’s destination, but not the way you imagine, argues Mikey Leung.

This article originally published in the Daily Star’s Forum Magazine at this weblink.

The number of reasons that travelers avoid Bangladesh cannot even be counted on two hands.

On foreign television screens, riots and floods are the leading actors; their supporting cast is no less extraordinary. Pseudo-Islamic extremism garners a major role, while abject poverty plays like a forgettable soundtrack. Interminable corruption adds to the atmosphere of a Shakespearean tragedy: the characters always suffer inescapably under the weight of their own extraordinary gluttony.

For a country whose world reputation seems to be constantly drowning, it is hard to imagine that Bangladesh will one day become a traveler’s destination on par with its neighbours. How is this possible? In five years, the Bangladesh travel industry will be totally unrecognisable compared to the industry of today.

Barisal Sunrise

Tourism in Bangladesh is inevitable

Consider the Chinese tourism experience, a path this nation already treads. Little more than 10 years ago, Chinese domestic tourism was infantile, in the same way that Bangladeshi tourism is now embryonic. Powered by an upwardly mobile middle class, the industry evolved new tourism products while promoting existing destinations. The market was literally captive: very few Chinese had the means to travel outside China. Even today, very few do.



Show me more… »