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Bhutan welcomes back tourists after COVID-19 with honey, turmeric and SIM cards

Twenty-three foreign visitors landed in Bhutan on Friday, the first to arrive as the Himalayan kingdom reopened its borders after more than two years
following the COVID-19 pandemic, with officials looking to tourism to help revive the local economy.

September 23, 2022
By Gopal Sharma
23 September 2022

By Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU, Sept 23 (Reuters) – Twenty-three foreign
visitors landed in Bhutan on Friday, the first to arrive as the
Himalayan kingdom reopened its borders after more than two years
following the COVID-19 pandemic, with officials looking to
tourism to help revive the local economy.

Wedged between China and India, the country known for its
natural beauty and ancient Buddhist culture, first opened to
wealthy tourists in 1974. In March 2020 it shut its borders to
visitors – a major source of income – after detecting its first
case of COVID-19.

The constitutional monarchy of fewer than 800,000 people has
reported just over 61,000 infections and only 21 deaths, but the
$3 billion economy contracted in the last two fiscal years,
pushing more people into poverty.

"Tourism for us is more than just revenue," said Dorji
Dhradhul, Director General of the Tourism Council of Bhutan
(TCB), after receiving the first visitors at the country’s only
international airport at Paro, near the capital city of Thimphu.

He said the tiny country was keen to be “very much a part of
the whole world”.

“We feel through tourism we can do that … take advantage
of their support and goodwill,” he told Reuters from Bhutan,
referring to the international community.

Each visitor who arrived aboard the first flight from
Kathmandu in neighbouring Nepal was offered small packs of
organic honey, tea, Bhutanese turmeric and a local SIM card all
in a tote bag as a gift, the authorities said.

In July, Bhutan raised its Sustainable Development Fee to
$200 per visitor per night from the $65 it had charged for three
decades saying it was keen to welcome more tourists who could
spend money.
Officials said the fees would be spent on projects like
planting trees, upskilling tourism workers, maintaining hiking
trails, reducing reliance on fossil fuels and electrifying
transportation vehicles to offset tourists’ carbon footprints.

About 315,600 tourists visited in 2019, up 15.1% from the
year before, with visitors contributing about $84 million on
average each year to the economy for the three years before the
pandemic hit, TCB data showed.
(Reporting by Gopal Sharma)

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