Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Int’l visitors to Cambodia’s Angkor heritage site up 23 pct in 2011

 PHNOM PENH, Jan. 10 (Xinhua) -- Cambodia's Angkor Wat temples, one of the world heritage sites, had attracted 1.6 million  foreign visitors in 2011, an increase of 23 percent from 1.3 million in a year earlier, according to the statistics of Siem Reap  provincial tourism department on Tuesday.
  Among the top ten countries visiting the temples, South Korea was ranked first with 265,000 visitors, up 31 percent; Vietnam at  second with 251,400, up 45 percent; Japan at third with 120,200, up 5 percent; and China came at fourth with 119,900, up 81  percent.
  The statistics also showed that Thai tourists to the temples had slightly declined by 0.2 percent to 42,250 due to border dispute  that led to armed clashes in February and April last year.
  “Base on the figures, we see that Chinese visitors to the temples last year grew sharply and we expect that the trend will  continue in coming years,” Chhoeuy Chhorn, administration chief of Siem Reap provincial tourism department, told Xinhua by  telephone on Tuesday.
  “More foreigners come to the temples thanks to the increases of connecting flights and chartered flights between Asian  countries and Siem Reap,” he said. “Also, there are broader promotions of Cambodia’s tourism potentials to the world.”
  Siem Reap’s Angkor archeological park is the country's largest cultural tourism destination; it is located some 315 kilometers  Northwest of Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia.
  The entrance fees to visit the Angkor archeological site is 20 U. S. dollars a day for a foreign visitor, 40 U.S. dollars for a three -day visit and 60 U.S. dollars for a weeklong visit, said Chhoeuy Chhorn
  The tourism industry is one of the main four pillars supporting the Cambodian economy. The others are garment industry,  agriculture and real estates.

No comments:

Post a Comment