• Friday, April 19, 2024

News

Bhutan makes Indians, Bangladeshis pay ‘sustainable development fee’

Tourists walking on a suspension bridge over the Puna Tsang Chhu river in Punakha province in Bhutan. (Photo by LILLIAN SUWANRUMPHA/AFP via Getty Images)

By: LakshmiPS

Bhutan is introducing a “sustainable development fee” for regional tourists following a spike in Indian visitors that has sparked worries for the unique Himalayan kingdom’s cherished ecology.

The majority of tourists already cough up $250 per day in high season — including meals, transport, and accommodation — to visit the country of 750,000 people famous for putting happiness before economic growth and being carbon negative.

But this “high value, low impact” strategy has come under strain in recent years because of a sharp rise in visitors from its giant neighbour India — who are exempt from the levy.

On Monday Bhutan’s lower house of parliament passed legislation meaning that visitors from India, Bangladesh, and the Maldives have to pay a fee of 1,200 ngultrums ($16.85) per day from July.

In 2018, Bhutan received 200,000 visitors from countries in the region, up nearly 10 percent from 2017, sparking fears that it was becoming just another mass tourism destination.

India’s superstar cricket captain Virat Kohli did much to publicise Bhutan when he posted on social media photos from a recent trip with his wife, Bollywood actress Anushka Sharma.

While India’s foremost celebrity couple, nicknamed collectively as “Virushka”, behaved themselves, others have not.

Last October an Indian biker caused outrage by clambering on top of a monument to pose for a photograph.

However, the chairman of Bhutan’s hotel and restaurants association, Sonam Wangchuk, voiced fears that newly built budget hotels accommodating the surge in Indian visitors would now go bust.

“We have shared our concerns and sentiments to the government. But despite that they still went ahead with the decision,” Wangchuk told AFP.

Tandi Dorji, Bhutan’s foreign minister and Tourism Council head, said that the government would consider fiscal incentives if the new fee affected the hotel sector.

Related Stories