Bangkok Post

Dasta, Local Alike tout lodge

- NANAT SUCHIVA

Local Alike, an online travel platform for Thailand, has joined with the Designated Areas for Sustainabl­e Tourism Administra­tion (Dasta) to promote the Chiang Rai-based social enterprise Lanjia Lodge as a way to support local tourism and reduce poverty.

According to Dasta’s 20-year developmen­t plan, Lanjia Lodge is one of many projects being supported to help develop sustainabl­e tourism and generate revenue for local communitie­s.

Lanjia Lodge is an eco-friendly community-based lodge located on a hill in Chiang Rai, providing experience­s with hill tribe communitie­s, including hiking and Hmong batik classes.

Dasta’s director of tourism competitiv­eness, Pornsook Chongprasi­th, said Lanjia Lodge can help Dasta increase local tourism sustainabi­lity, create jobs and thus reduce wealth inequality.

“To facilitate Dasta’s plan to increase community-based tourism, I believe Lanjia Lodge can help us a lot,” he said.

Lanjia Lodge is jointly operated by Ocean Oasis Travel Co, Population and Community Developmen­t Associatio­n.

Local Alike founder and chief executive officer Somsak Boonkham said that Local Alike sees the importance of helping locals stand on their own two feet by using their abundant natural resources and photogenic landscapes to provide tourismrel­ated services.

He said Local Alike is very pleased to work with Dasta as they have the same goal of improving lives and eliminatin­g poverty.

“Lanjia Lodge is one of many projects we have been working closely with Dasta on and I hope it will be successful,” said Mr Somsak, who founded Local Alike in 2012.

He said Local Alike has partnered with more than 10 public and private sector players to stamp out poverty in remote areas of Thailand and work with more than 70 local communitie­s in 30 provinces.

“I reaffirm that Local Alike will keep working to cover more than 100 local communitie­s in a bid to make villagers as selfrelian­t as possible,” said Mr Somsak.

Dasta is aiming to create local tourist attraction­s and activities and revitalise local ecology to attract tourists from home and abroad. Under Datsa’s 20-year developmen­t plan, it seeks to increase local tourism revenue by 10% while significan­tly lowering poverty within the first five years of implementa­tion.

Datsa has worked for more than five years to push community-based tourism and aims to help provide tourism revenue to 2,500 districts nationwide in 2017, up from 1,500 districts last year.

Datsa’s six designated tourism areas are: Koh Chang’s connecting areas between Koh Kood and Koh Mak; Pattaya’s connecting areas of Bang Lamung and Koh Larn; Sukhothai’s old town covering Sri Satchanala­i and Kamphaeng Phet; Loei province including Phu Luang, Phu Rua, Phu Kradung and Chiang Khan; five subdistric­ts in Nan province; and U Thong city in Suphan Buri.

The state is supporting Dasta and has received support from the Tourism and Sports Ministry to develop local tourism sites in a bid to achieve sustainabl­e tourism.

 ??  ?? Local Alike and the Designated Areas for Sustainabl­e Tourism Administra­tion are promoting Chiang Rai’s Lanjia Lodge to boost community-based tourism.
Local Alike and the Designated Areas for Sustainabl­e Tourism Administra­tion are promoting Chiang Rai’s Lanjia Lodge to boost community-based tourism.

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