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They also targeted rural tourism, which would also take a 180-degree turn.
Experts said Sunday that domestic tourism would play a key role in saving the sector from the Covid-19 economy for the next 3 years.
They also focused on rural tourism, which would also be a radical change.
The recommendations were made at a 2020 World Tourism Day webinar, entitled “Tourism for Rural Development”, organized through the Bangladesh Tourism Corporation (CPC),
“We are offering quality services to foreign tourists due to weak infrastructure. To bring this sector to life, local and foreign investment is imperative,” said Ziaul Haque Howlader, BPC’s Head of Public Relations.
He also shared some of the villages where PCB is expanding as tourist spots, adding Khalijuri and Susong Durgapur upazilas in Netrakona, Kazipur in Sirajganj, Gajni in Sherpur and Comilla.
“The strengths of rural hiking are herbal resources, cultural resources and archaeological sites. Thanks to rural hiking, other locals at the main attractions of the country place jobs in ways: artisans, vendors, cooks, villagers, tour guides, marshals, vendors, other people, etc. , he added.
Moniruzzaman Masum, director of the Bangladesh Tourism Operators Association (TOAB), has focused on national tourism since the afterintion of the Covid-19 pandemic.
“It will play a central role for the next 3 years. In this case, villages are the key to long-term tourism,” he added.
Other program panelists also discussed some of the weaknesses and challenges of the sector, adding environmental pollution, poor planning, lack of quality tourism, lack of professional labor and lack of promotion/marketing.
They also suggested the government reopen St. Martin and Maheskhali Island to tour operators, hotels and motels there.
Ram Chandra Das, president of BPC, suggested that everyone stop blaming themselves and paint in combination with the country’s unusual purpose of raising the country’s tourism sector.
“We want experienced advice. When the new law is passed, there will be no more disruptions like now,” he said.
“Today we see a tendency to stop in new places among tourists as in the Haor regions. This creates a new opportunity to create new tourist sites in the future. But many tourists are also guilty of the waste there. Everyone avoids such practices,” he added.
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Kazi Anis Ahmed, editor