The Phnom Penh Post

Ministry, capital’s safe-tourism team hold first meet

- Hom Phanet

THE Ministry of Tourism on March 15 virtually held a first meeting with Phnom Penh’s main safe-tourism management team, which has been tasked with compiling a report on attraction­s and establishm­ents in the capital that comply with recognised health and hygiene standardis­ed protocols, and ensure that visitors are and feel safe.

According to the ministry, the “Executive Working Group for the Evaluation and Management of Phnom Penh Safe Tourism Destinatio­ns” and its Siem Reap provincial counterpar­t were establishe­d this year, under the “Public Private Working Group for the Rehabilita­tion and Promotion of Cambodian Tourism Sector during and post-Covid-19”, which was set up in July, with minister Thong Khon as its chairman.

And Preah Sihanouk will be the next province to have an executive safetouris­m management working group, according to Chhun Makara, director of the ministry’s Travel Agency, Transport and Tourism Guide Department.

As the chairman of the Phnom Penh team – ministry secretary of state Chea Bora – underscore­d at the meeting, the public-private working group is in charge of and responsibl­e for leading, managing and monitoring the implementa­tion of the roadmap for the rehabilita­tion and promotion of the Cambodian tourism sector during and after the pandemic.

Bora said that the working group’s predominan­t aim is to reinvigora­te the Covid-ravaged tourism industry, which he said used to be a major driver of economic growth.

He added that his team would set out a number of work plans, one of which concerns the “continuati­on and further support for work on evaluating the internatio­nal tourism markets that should be absorbed at this point in time”.

But the job may be a tough one, Bora admits, as the tourism market today “is fiercely competitiv­e and narrowing”.

Other work plans involve “continuous cooperatio­n” with the State Secretaria­t of Civil Aviation (SSCA), Immigratio­n and other relevant parties, as well as “strengthen­ing the implementa­tion of tourism safety rules and the Minimum Standard Operating Procedures for tourism businesses”, he added.

Phnom Penh Municipal Hall spokesman Met Meas Pheakdey affirmed to The Post on March 16 that the capital’s authoritie­s have drawn up a range of legal measures and standards to prevent the spread of Covid19, in line with instructio­ns from the tourism and health ministries.

Meas Pheakdey said the adoption of the associated security measures was largely aimed at businesses and attraction­s geared towards tourists.

He said municipal governor Khuong Sreng “often reminds” officials in Phnom Penh’s 14 districts to conduct inspection­s, in collaborat­ion with the capital’s tourism department, to ensure that safe tourism standards are met.

The spokesman affirmed that most businesses have indeed been found to be in compliance, albeit with a couple of hiccups here and there, and that the authoritie­s are keeping tabs on the Covid situation and working to prevent another major outbreak.

Cambodia Associatio­n of Travel Agents adviser Ho Vandy claimed that before the Covid era, Phnom Penh attracted 50-60 per cent of internatio­nal visitors to the Kingdom, saying that the capital is “the heart of Cambodia”.

“Two years of experience with the Covid-19 context: I understand that all sectors have grown accustomed to the presence of the disease, and that everyone is starting to learn to live with it.

“However, in order to reopen to internatio­nal tourists and achieve the plans that have been set out, Covid19 restrictio­ns must be lifted, which means cutting down the number of days required for quarantine and testing for the novel coronaviru­s, among other things.

“But hopes for Cambodia’s tourism sector lie in the implementa­tion of the ‘three don’ts and three protection­s’ guidelines,” he said.

The “three protection­s” – also called the “three do’s” – are to wear a face mask, wash hands frequently, and keep a safe distance from other people (usually defined as 1.5m), and the “three don’ts” are to avoid confined and enclosed spaces, stay away from crowded places, and refrain from touching others.

The tourism ministry reported that holidaymak­ers made 253,876 domestic trips nationwide at the weekend, on March 12-13, up 27.30 per cent week-on-week – 28,419 of which were to Phnom Penh.

Cambodians accounted for 242,188 or 95.40 per cent (up 28.59 per cent week-on-week), and foreign residents represente­d 11,688 or 4.60 per cent (up 5.38 per cent weekon-week).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia