
‘Is it safe to travel to India?' Tour agents field jittery calls from abroad
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Kolkata: The terror attack in Kashmir on Tuesday will impact tourism not just in the Valley, but the gunshots will reverberate far and wide, scaring off inbound tourists scheduled to visit Kolkata, Darjeeling, and other popular destinations in Rajasthan and Kerala. A travel agent who brings international tourists to Kolkata during Durga Puja has received calls from jittery visitors booked to travel for the festival this Sept.
"Some tourists who took vaccines in Jan for the trip to India in Sept called to express their anxiety. I assured them that India is a vast country and that Kolkata is far removed from Kashmir. But there is no denying that they are jittery," said Jaideep Mukherjee, who has been bringing overseas tourists to Kolkata during Durga Puja for over a decade.
Debjit Dutta, chairman of the Indian Association of Tour Operators, who just returned from hard-selling various Indian destinations in Malaysia, has also been on call since Tuesday to explain to international tour operators that the other Indian tourist spots are far away from Kashmir.
"When a terror attack targets tourists in any part of a country, tourism in the entire country gets impacted, as it is difficult to explain to an overseas tourist that Kashmir is very far from Kolkata, Udaipur, or Kochi. They want to avoid India. They may even prefer travelling to Kathmandu, which is closer to Kashmir than Kolkata," Dutta said.
Industry players are worried that the psychological impact of this terror news on foreign travellers will last a long time. "I fear advance bookings to various Indian destinations until early next year could get cancelled," said Dutta.
With the ministry of home affairs putting Delhi, Mumbai, Jaipur, Amritsar, and other major Indian cities on high alert following the Pahalgam terror attack, international travel agencies dealing with tourists bound for India have begun putting plans on hold. The United States has already put Kashmir in the red zone. Other countries may also issue travel advisories. Anil Punjabi, a national committee member of the Travel Agents' Federation of India, said, "Given that the attack was on tourists and not security forces, as it happened in the past, there will be a lot of apprehension among foreigners."
Manav Soni, a national committee member of the Travel Agents' Association of India, is, however, optimistic. He pointed out travellers to India are mature and know how vast the country is. "Inbound traffic to Kashmir will be impacted for a year. But I believe, and hope, foreigners continue to visit other parts of India. Otherwise, it will be extremely unfortunate," he said.
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Indian Express
6 minutes ago
- Indian Express
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Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Take your pick: Pre-puja bus ride to Siliguri comes for 5,000, flight costs 10,500; train berths sold out
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Deccan Herald
4 hours ago
- Deccan Herald
Visitors to Chitradurga fort find digital hurdle difficult to breach
Hubballi: A section of visitors to the historical Chitradurga fort either return without seeing the legendary 'Obavvana kindi' or argue with guards at the gate to gain free entry as self-ticketing (by scanning QR code) fails to issue tickets due to poor internet connectivity and lengthy process of uploading details on the ASI-pay ministry of culture, under which the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) protected monument comes, has launched self-ticketing only system across India to minimise deployment of human resources at ticket counters, reduce operation cost (purchase of ticket rolls and vending machines) and reduce queue fort is one of the 25 monuments across India to pilot this initiative. However, forget the benefits, visitors to the fort are facing hardships..A security guard at Chitradurga fort said seven out of 10 attempts fail due to poor takes at least 8-10 minutes for each transaction to complete as visitors have to fill in their details along with uploading identity proof and mobile numbers on the ASI-pay app..'Many visitors don't carry smart-phones or do not have phone-pay/G-pay. The network coverage at the fort is poor. So, it becomes very difficult to manage the crowd,' said another many as 16 centrally protected monuments in Karnataka have entry them, two monuments — Chitradurga fort and Tipu Sultan palace in Bengaluru — allow visitors only under self-ticketing have to scan a QR code placed at the entry gate via digital payment apps and buy the 25 monuments selected by ASI across India for this pilot project, two are in ASI intends to implement self-ticketing system across all 250 centrally protected ticketed monuments in the country..A senior ASI official said the key main intention of the Ministry of Culture to implement ASI-pay app is to give Indian visitors Rs 5 discount and foreign visitors Rs 50 multiple ASI officials and guides at Hampi and Vijayapura informed DH that the app, instead of helping visitors, was resulting in hardships..'Earlier, we used to deploy two staff to issue tickets at Vijayapura monuments. Now, with the government insisting on self-ticketing, we are deploying five staff on weekends to help tourists,' said a Dharwad circle officer of app has also reduced mass booking of tickets. Only five persons can book a ticket per a guide at Hampi, says visitors are facing problems while booking tickets at Lotus Mahal and Vittala temple complex due to poor network coverage..'A majority of visitors buy tickets at the counter though they are a bit costlier than booking through QR scanning method,' he says and adds the process should have been as simple as making a digital ASI officer at Hampi circle said the complaint had been brought to the notice of higher-ups..'The network issue wasn't brought to our notice, we will look into it,' he says..A senior officer in Bengaluru circle, under which Chitradurga fort and Tipu Sultan palace come, says they are just following orders from the ministry of culture..'We have been asked to issue tickets at these monuments only via QR code scanning. Officials in Delhi or regional directors can take a call on reactivating booking counters,' he says.