![]() |
|
Domestic Brief
End travel warnings
FROM ISSUE #286 (17 FEB 2006 - 23 FEB 2006)
| TABLE OF CONTENTS
Foreign governments' travel advisories hurt Nepal's poor the most and should be replaced by another less harmful mechanism, says the Nepal Association of Tour Operators (NATO). About 750,000 people in the country depend on the tourism industry and in most parts of Nepal it is the only source of income. "In large parts of this country this industry has served as the only source of income for the people who are more often that not the sole breadwinners in their family and at least three people in turn are dependent on them," it added in a news release on Wednesday. In that context, it is difficult to see how the global plan to end poverty by 2015 can be achieved when travel advisories continue to affect the most vulnerable, according to NATO.
|
• Back to work
• Gurkhas greet verdict • Dateline Varanasi • Yadav's turn • "Society still looks down on business people." Over the past seven days • Giving their art and soul
• 'Tis the season • Down and dirty • Venting it out in Varanasi • Unseen heroes Over the past seven days LATEST COMMENTS
gorkhemutu on 'Gallery':
IF YOU ALL HAVE FAITH, AND YOU ARE BIT RELIGIOUS, THEN YOU SHOULD THINK OF ONE ....
jai maobadi on 'Gallery':
Those people, who still think the Gyanendra a hero or a king, are a real douchebag. ....
SPECIAL
|
NEPALI TIMES IS A PUBLICATION OF HIMALMEDIA PRIVATE LIMITED | ABOUT US | ADVERTISE | SUBSCRIPTION | CONTACT |