Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Chinese tourists plan in a Mandarin fix

- Jeevan Prakash Sharma

NEW DELHI: The tourism ministry’s ambitious plan to substantia­lly increase the inflow of Chinese tourists into India from the current number of around 120,000 has run into a strange barrier: India has only 37 authorised­guidesconv­ersantin Mandarin.

Acknowledg­ing the challenge, KJ Alphons, minister of state for tourism, who recently visited China to woo tourists, said, “I don’t have enough number of people who speak Mandarin and we need to address the problem.”

The Indian Tour Operators Associatio­n, Tourist Guide Federation of India, and senior ministry officials agree that India’s supply of Mandarin guides falls short of the required strength.

Over the years, Chinese tourists have become an economic force all around the world. In 2017, 100 million Chinese made overseas trips as tourists according to the website of the country’s ministry of tourism. India receives a fraction of this.

Indeed, including business travellers, India receives only 250,000 Chinese visitors on an average a year, around 2.7% of the total visitors it receives.

Most Chinese tourists do not speak English. Operators who exclusivel­y deal with Chinese tourists say the crisis of Mandarin guides is most evident during the Chinese New Year, which falls in first quarter of the year.

Arun Anand, a veteran tour operator with offices in China and India, says operators have no option but to hire unauthoris­ed guides.

Tour operators say besides 37 licensed guides, there are around 300 guides conversant in Mandarin. The latter don’t fulfil the tourism ministry’s criteria to obtain a licence. “Most unauthoris­ed guides are not graduates, so they can’t sit for the written test conducted by the ministry.

They only take short duration crash courses to speak Chinese,” says Chander Mohan Luthra, an authorised guide who has been working for the past 10 years.

However, some unauthoris­ed guides are “good enough” to fill the vacuum during peak season.

“They are as good as the licensed ones but either they don’t have the required qualificat­ion or sometimes are not interested in getting their license renewed,” says Anand whose firm has been active since 1991.

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