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Advts: Classifieds | Employment | Obituary | Andhra Pradesh
Staff Reporter
HYDERABAD: The Chief Minister, Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, has called for a combined effort by southern States to woo the foreign traveller to look beyond the Delhi-Agra-Jaipur circuit. Inaugurating the South Indian Tourism Ministers conference here on Thursday, Dr. Reddy said they should leverage their combined strengths and replace competitiveness with cooperation. Their approach should be to coordinate in all areas of tourism growth and position South India as one large block. He said South put together had everything that a traveller could ask for nature, religious and spiritual heritage, culture, art and craft, varied cuisine and new and interesting tourism products.
Ambitious target
Stating that the South India Tourism Council (SITCON) would help in initiating a dialogue among all stakeholders in the region, he expressed confidence that in the years to come it would be a platform to unify their combined interests and promote South India as the most attractive tourist destination, he said. The Chief Minister felt that "Southern Splendour," the proposed luxury train of South India, could become extremely popular among tourists because of its competitive tariff, among other things. The Karnataka Tourism Minister, D.T. Jayakumar, said by promoting each State individually and competing among themselves, they were not only frittering away the scarce resources but confusing tourists. He envisioned a "sampoorna yatra'' for the traveller coming to this part of the country a choice of destinations to see, cuisines to taste and cultures to experience. He called for a uniform motor vehicles and entry tax structure across the southern States which could go a long way in streamlining movement of vehicles across the borders. Otherwise, harassment at the borders was a common complaint of tourists, tour operators and travel agents. Pondicherry was represented by its Agriculture Minister, A. Namassivayam, while tourism officials of Tamil Nadu and Kerala were present.
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