The Asian Age

Boost Taj, protect tourists

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UP chief minister Yogi Adityanath’s visit to Agra’s Taj Mahal, broom in hand, has both literal and metaphoric­al significan­ce. There is a deeper meaning to be read in the official endorsemen­t of India’s most recognisab­le icon. The monument to love has of late been buffeted by political winds, with ruling party leaders making noises about its genesis, dragging it into a needless communal debate. The CM’s stand reaffirmin­g the Taj as a great symbol of creative Indian architectu­re of a bygone age and his stressing the need to keep its environs clean to enhance its magnetic attraction to tourism is critical at a time when India’s image as a tourist destinatio­n is at risk following the horrific attack on a young Swiss couple at Fatehpur Sikri.

National Crime Bureau statistics may show a declining trend in crimes against foreign tourists, but that’s of little comfort when something like the ambushing of the Swiss couple by a mob occurs. To promote tourism and hope to improve on the 8.97 million foreign tourist arrivals in 2016, India must make a conscious effort to create a safe and secure environmen­t, specially around tourist spots. It is ironic that while authoritar­ian China offers good facilities and perfect safety, democratic India is unable to guarantee foreign tourists’ safety. Any hit to the nation’s due to the kind of lawlessnes­s seen in UP can have a negative effect on tourist arrivals as much as the sexual assaults reported with regularity from various metros. It’s time to act positively to ensure tourism, with its 9.6 per cent contributi­on to GDP, is not damaged.

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