Panaji: 'Hippies, Bad Tourism Ministers are Poor Adverts for Goa'


By Mayabhushan Nagvenkar

Panaji, Oct 19 (IANS) Hugh Gantzer, one of India's first travel writers, shoots straight from the hip. Little wonder that, at a travel fair here, he gunned for hippies, backpackers and even "rubbish tourism ministers", saying they were sullying Goa's image as a top tourist destination.

Gantzer, a seventh generation Anglo-Indian, raised a lot of eyebrows at the just concluded International Travel Mart (ITM) Goa for his no nonsense report card on the state of Goa's tourism.

"A tourism minister is an ambassador of tourism for your state or the country. And when Goa has a tourism minister who is involved in all kinds of shady deals, that is the worst kind of advertisement for this destination," the former Indian Navy commander told IANS.

In his mid-70s now, Gantzer has written nearly half a dozen travel books and lent his voice to nearly 60 travel documentaries.

He said the sensational sexual assault and death of British teenager Scarlett Keeling at Anjuna beach two years ago had already got Goa a lot of bad press in Britain, a country which contributes to half of Goa's foreign tourist population of 500,000.

"The negative publicity Goa had been receiving after the British girl's death was on the wane, but now this minister fellow has messed things up further as far as Goa's image is concerned," said Gantzer, a tourism industry expert who resides in Musoorie.

Gantzer was referring to former tourism minister Francisco alias Mickky Pacheco, a Nationalist Congress party (NCP) legislator who was forced to step down after facing a slew of criminal charges, which included culpable homicide, money laundering, bigamy, and assault.

Gantzer, who has been tracking tourism trends throughout the country, said it was time Goa bade goodbye to hippie- and backpack-oriented tourism, which first put Goa on the global tourism map nearly 40 years ago.

"I have been criticised for saying this, but Goa has to say goodbye to the hippies and
backpackers. This class of tourism inevitably is associated with drugs and that never makes for a healthy spectacle," Gantzer said.

"Goa has moved on. Tourism in Goa should move on too. Goa needs to aim for the high spending tourists. The authorities have to decide between volume or value tourism. It's a small state. Volume will further put a stress on the state's resources," he said.

Illustrating, Gantzer said young Israeli backpackers who make a beeline to India and follow the Goa-Rajasthan-Himachal circuit immediately after their compulsory military stint were not a healthy tourism advert at all.

"I have nothing against Israelis. But in the army, they are trained to hate dark skinned Arabs. And they carry their mindset when they come here. It completely puts off other tourists and can create tensions between them and the locals," he said.

Gantzer also said the manner in which coastal land is being sold to Russians and other foreign nationals is deplorable and the trend needs to be arrested, if possible, by enacting legislation.

"Goa must protect its natural resources if it has to protect its tourism. Inaction by the government is really deplorable. The government needs to act and stop sale of such large tracts of land to foreigners if the state needs to protect its identity and tourism, both," Gantzer said.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Dr. Cajetan Coelho, Goa, India

    Thu, Oct 21 2010

    Foreign tourists and visitors are our distinguished guests. And they need to enhance and keep up the tag of distinction intact and shining.

    Bargaining with the locals to lower prices of their goods and sell their labour for almost nothing make the foreign tourists look like paupers in the humble places they visit.

    The locals by selling their labour and goods at low prices to the well to do visitors from the developed world are really cheating their own dependents and family members from living a dignified life.

    How will the sellers be able to provide decent education, nutrition, housing, healthcare and minimum comfort to their parents, offspring and families ? What about their old age ?

    In the developed world one pays for every thing as per the price tag. People would laugh and chase the one who tries to bargain. If and when people find that prices are beyond the power of their limited purse they quietly put their tail between their legs and take to instant flight with a stoic upright stance.

    I have often been amazed to see the utter humility of some of our distinguished foreign tourists and visitors bargaining shamelessly before petty vendors, hawkers and other poor sections of our society.

    Foreign visitors need to do a bit of soul-searching, discernment and examination of conscience before they plunge headlong in exploiting the weak, humble and poor in the countries they are privileged to be respectable and honoured guests, visitors and tourists.


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