Tourism grows in Myanmar
Visiting Myanmar, one of the most isolated countries in the world,
makes Uledev Viadreslav feel like an explorer back in the old days
before air travel started making the world feel smaller.
"Here there are almost no tourists," the 28-year-old Russian tourist
said.
"We can go everywhere without any crowds, and see only locals around
us. Here I can feel that I'm an explorer," Viadreslav said while resting
with two friends in a shady corner of Yangon's spectacular golden
Shwedagon Pagoda.

Foreign tourists visit the Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon. Visiting
Myanmar, one of the most isolated countries in the world, makes
Uledev Viadreslav feel like an explorer back in the old days before
air travel started making the world feel smaller. AFP
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When tourists arrive on flights from neighbouring Thailand, they set
their watches back 30 minutes to adjust to Myanmar's unique time zone.
But many say they feel they have gone back 30 years, to a time before
Asian cities were clogged with traffic and pollution, to a slow-paced
town where men still wear traditional longyis instead of trousers, and
women and children paint their faces white with sandalwood makeup.
Viadreslav said he and his friends knew little about the country,
which used to be called Burma, before they arrived.
Motorcycles are banned leaving the roads to decades-old Nissan
Sunny's that would have long ago landed in the scrapyards of Myanmar's
better off neighbours.
Myanmar only began allowing tourists to visit in the last 20 years,
and movement outside the main cities and temple sites are still
restricted.
But that's part of the appeal for travellers like Viadreslav, who
have slowly but steadily pumped more and more money into Myanmar's
struggling economy. Last year, Myanmar's official statistics showed that
the overall number of foreign visitors dropped by about five percent to
630,060 people, mainly due to a fall in cross-border traffic.
But airport arrivals by big-spending international tourists were up
16 percent, so Myanmar's tourism revenue climbed by nearly eight percent
to 164 million dollars.
A German tourist, who identified himself only as Manfred, said he
believed tourism was one way of helping Myanmar's impoverished people,
but added that he was trying to avoid spending his money with businesses
controlled by the government.
The government still hopes that more tourists - but not too many more
- will keep coming.
It has agreed to allow new international flights to China and
Thailand by private carrier Air Bagan, which could start in April.
Tour operators say bookings have been up for the peak travel season,
which began in October and will end in May.
"All the tour companies got more tourists during the current high
season. We also believe that more tourists will visit this year because
we already have many reservations for the next high season, even though
it's still early for booking," one tour company manager said.
She said tourists come because Myanmar offers an experience that few
people have had, and without the crowds that pour into destinations like
Angkor Wat in Cambodia or Phuket in Thailand.
"Some tourists just want to avoid the crowds," she said.
(AFP)
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