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Showing posts from 2022

Why just a Visit Nepal Decade?

Why stop at a ‘Visit Nepal Decade’? Why not a set aside a ‘Decade for Nepal’? While the VND is a welcome move, much needs to be done to make it a reality. Especially challenging will be securing multi-partisan support. And on this hinge the dream. If dreams are all it takes why not conjure up a Decade for Nepal? A decade in which we can aim not just for a USD 7.5 billion in revenue from tourism but in which we can aim to take our GDP to quarter of a trillion United States Dollars. Things are happening around the world, in our own neighborhood, and indeed in Nepal itself that could make all things align for something like this to happen. Companies are moving away from China. They have not all left already but, increasingly, in boardrooms around the world, the refrain is ‘we are not putting any more investment into China,’ and the investors of those companies and their consumers agree. The world’s factory floor of the last sixty years does not look so enticing anymore. This is a re...

The Visit Nepal Decade and five million tourists by 2032

On the 23 rd of September 2022, the Nepali Cabinet approved a plan by Nepal’s Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Civil Aviation to declare a Visit Nepal Decade from 2023 to 2032. The twin primary aims of the campaign will be to attract five million tourists by 2032 from an earlier all-time high of 1.2 million visitors in 2019 and increase the average spending per tourist per day to USD 125 from the current USD 47. Both are daunting tasks but not as ambitious as a third aim, discussed and discarded as being impractical; to increase the average length of stay to 20 days per tourist from the present 12 days. It will do well to recall here that past Visit Nepal campaigns were limited to a particular year. Visit Nepal ’98. Destination Nepal 2011, Lumbini Tourism Year 2012, and most recently the aborted Visit Nepal Year 2020. Each of those in addition, save the Lumbini one, had a single aim - denoted in number of tourists to be attracted to Nepal in that particular year. In 1998 the aim a...

The case for Why Nepal needs a Strong National Carrier

 The first flight into Kathmandu’s Gauchar Airport, a Douglas DC-3 ‘Dakota’ landed in 1949 only thirty-five years after the first EVER commercial flight took place in the United States of America. And that first flight, whether born of the romance of travel or bearing VIPs projecting their importance, fired up the Nepali imagination. In a country of jungles, rivers, hills, mountains, and foot trails that formed the ‘highway system’, and even now described as inaccessible, the aero plane offered up undreamt-of possibilities. Air travel would open Nepal to the outside world in the late fifties and the far-flung Nepali cities, – often several days’ travel-time away – would thrum to the sound of the ‘Dakotas’. At the forefront of this amazing transformation would be Royal Nepal Airlines or RA. –the sometimes venerated, but often vilified, National Carrier of Nepal. Development of Short Take Off and Landing (STOL) planes like the Pilatus PC-6 ‘Porter’ and the De Havilland DHC-6 ‘Twi...