Wednesday, 20 November 2013

Tourist season begins but Agra hoteliers see no boom

Tourist season begins but Agra hoteliers see no boom (© Getty Images)

Getty Images

The tourist season in Agra usually begins today on the World Tourism Day (September 27).

"The footfalls at the Taj Mahal may have increased due to the opening of the Yamuna Expressway which most 'same-day return' visitors find convenient and time-saving, but the night-stay problem continues to dog hotels in Agra. The occupancy rate at the moment is very low and reports for coming weeks are not too flattering either," Rajiv Tiwari, president of the Federation of Travel Agencies, told IANS.

Figures from the Archaeological Survey of India and the Agra Development Authority suggest an increasing trend in the number of visitors to the Taj Mahal, which attracted close to six million tourists last year. The number could be higher if you take into account the fact that a significantly large number of visitors who do not have to pay are below 15 years of age and, therefore, not recorded.

"A lot of people keep telling us Agra does not have a night life and that is the reason why tourists do not stay here overnight. Well, if by night life they mean promoting activities like they do in Thailand's Pataya or Phuket, we certainly are very happy with selling our assets of culture, architecture and history.

"We have yoga, dances and cuisines. We are for clean eco-friendly tourism, one that brings peoples of the world and cultures closer and strengthens understanding. Our religious tourism is growing and the number of domestic visitors is going up steeply in the whole of the Braj region," Tiwari added.

According to Sandeep Arora, ex-president of the Agra Hotels and Restaurants Association, "the increased entrance ticket rates for foreign tourists (Rs.750/$12) is a huge deterrent. If a tourist has seen the Taj once, he avoids visiting it again because he would need to buy another ticket for Rs.750. Earlier this was not the case."

Arora said tourism in Agra was on the decline due to the crisis in Syria. "A large number of western tourists are holding back till the crisis gets resolved."

He felt the new trains that have connected Agra with Jaipur have also affected night stay, as tourists return in the evening to Jaipur.


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