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February 14, 2000

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Dream turns nightmare: Goa's tourism flounders after Millennium High

Sandesh Prabhudesai in Panaji

Goa's beach About two months back, Goa was celebrated as the Indian destination for the new millennium eve extravaganza.

Today, questions are being asked whether the new millennium would set a downtrend for tourism in Goa. Not long back, Goa was promoted as one of the favourite tourist destinations in the world in 2000.

At least, the official figures create a scare, though the industry still hopes to fare well next season. The state government, on the other hand, simply refuses to analyse the disturbing trend.

"We have no sustained culture of governance here for the last one decade. People in power are seen going for short-term gains, at the cost of the future of the tourism industry," complains Kirit Maganlal, president, the Travel and Tourism Association of Goa.

Foreign tourists in Goa Goa has witnessed 12 governments in just ten years since 1990, with almost every new government having a different tourism minister. As a result, the Draft Tourism Master Plan is still being prepared, with no problem being confronted with a concrete solution.

Email this report to a friend "Dirty beaches, roads with potholes, water shortage and lack of sewerage are the major problems facing the tourism industry in terms of infrastructure," admits Tourism Minister Victoria Fernandes, like all her predecessors. But hardly anything is being planned to arrest the problems.

A woman tourist drinks in the pleasures of Goa S S Keshkamat, a new director of tourism, prefers to project a rosy picture of growth in the industry rather than admitting the decline and finding solutions to overcome it. "We received over 16,000 more tourists and ten more charter flights this year," he states.

But the figures of three prime months of the peak season from October to December indicate that the growth is hardly two per cent this year, in spite of projecting Goa as the millennium favourite. Including foreign and domestic tourists, Goa received only 8,732 more tourists.

Among the 4,969 more foreign tourists who visited the coastal state during the peak season included almost 3,346 charter tourists, who are considered to be of no use to the trade and industry here since they do not spend much.

A typical tourist scene in Goa Even the trend among the domestic tourists was not as enthusiastic as expected, state the figures. Only 3,763 more tourists visited the Goan beaches in three prime months, in spite of special flights and railways for the millennium celebrations.

"It was a millennium mega flop. But I admit that our industry was primarily responsible for it. Let us hope we learn from it and create an atmosphere so that the tourist comes down to Goa with no tension," comments Maganlal.

The prime reason for the flop was the artificial hype created by travel agents that all rooms are already booked during the millennium celebrations, so that they could overcharge heavily. But it boomeranged as most of the tourists preferred not to take risk by visiting Goa, leaving rooms vacant on the night of 31 December.

"But Goa is a favourite destination even otherwise. I think we will get more tourists next year without any hype," hopes Maganlal.

But he admits that the industry is equally disturbed with the increasing decline in the growth rate every year, which has now reached to only two per cent.

Business

Goa

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