By Rapeepat Mantanarat
TTR Weekly
STUNG
TRENG, 1 November 2012: Cambodia and Laos’ border provinces, Stung
Treng and Champasak will join hands to promote two-way tourism.
The
plan will eventually extend cooperation to include Ubon Ratchathani in
Thailand bordering with Champasak and Phreah Vihear province in
Cambodia, next to Stung Treng.
Stung Treng Provincial Tourism Office director, Theany Loun, told TTR Weekly
at the close of an official meeting between Cambodian and Lao officials
in Pakse, yesterday, that they had agreed to hold another meeting in
December to sign the Memorandum of Understanding on tourism cooperation.
“The
MoU will endorse efforts by tour companies in the border provinces to
generate tourism by sharing business. If a tour operator in Stung Treng
has customers who will cross the border to Champasak, then a Lao tour
operator will handle the guests from the border; Stung Treng’s tour
operator will not cross the border to run the tour by themselves,” said
Ms Theany.
The preferred business model, in the past, was for tour
operators to continue to guide their clients after they crossed the
border, mainly for logistic and economic reasons. Sharing the business
will also require companies to offer compatible service standards and
equipment.
She added Champasak province pledges to invite the
Tourism Authority of Thailand to come on board to promote linked routes
between the three countries as Thailand is a main gateway for tourism
in this area and Thai tourists have been a major supplier already to
Champasak in Laos. In January, officials also plan to meet again, but in
Stung Treng province.
Cambodia’s government is upgrading a road
and constructing a bridge across the Mekong River to link Stung Treng
and Preah Vihear provinces, Ms Theany said once it is complete, it will
be a good opportunity for Stung Treng to receive more tourists from
southern Laos or from Thailand via Laos.
“The new road and bridge
will facilitate travel to Phreah Vihear and onwards to Siem Reap, giving
visitors another travel option,” said Ms Theany.
Stung
Treng was previously limited to being a transit point from Laos to
Phnom Penh, but now tourism products are being developed by NGOs and the
Tourism Ministry’s Mekong Discovery Trail Project, which has helped to
improve length of stay to around two days.
Ms Theany hopes
tourists will stop in Stung Treng for at least two days to explore
attractions in the province before heading onwards to Preah Vihear or
Siem Reap.
“Since 2007, tourism products have been developed and
we still have potential for further development to help us change from
transit point to a destination.”
“When the new Tropeang Kriel
immigration checkpoint opens early 2013, the provincial tourism office
and a local tour operator, Explore Asia will open a booth there to
provide information on tourism products,” said Ms Theany.
Currently,
it is possible to go to Preah Vihear by road, but conditions are not
good and it involves crossing a river by boat. The upgrade work is
expected to finish by 2014 with the bridge ready in 2015. The road from
Preah Vihear to Siem Reap is already completed.
There is also a
plan to revitalise Stung Treng Airport to become a gateway to the
northeast as it is strategically located near the border and surrounded
by several provinces — Ratanakiri, Kratie and Preah Vihear. The tourism
director said a Canadian consultant has already done a survey. Before
it was understood that Ratanakiri Airport would be the regional
gateway, but that has now been scrapped.
In addition, Stung Treng
has four hotels (two-star). The newest one, Gold River Hotel opened in
2011 with around 50 rooms. There are about 30 guesthouses in town.
Tourist
arrivals to the province stood around 100,000, domestic and
international during the January to September. Domestic tourists
increased 29% while international, increased 16%.
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