PHNOM PENH, Sept. 16 (Xinhua) -- The ancient Angkorian ruins face the danger of destruction as in the past years millions of visitors and job seekers rushed into Siem Reap, where the temples and the infrastructure were just unable to accommodate their overflowing admiration and aspiration, the Cambodian Daily reported here on Saturday.
"We don't have enough infrastructure to welcome mass
tourism. We are not ready. If one million come a year, the environment will be
destroyed very quickly," the paper quoted Tep Vattho as saying. She headed the
development department of the Apsara Authority, which was entrusted by the
government to manage the Angkor Archeological Park.
Officials were expecting two million visitors for
Angkor this year, twice the number of 2005, said Siem Reap's Provincial Governor
Sou Phirin, adding that between November and December alone, 500,000 tourists
would pack the town.
Meanwhile, Siem Reap's population was exploding
too. People flocked in from the eastern provinces of Kompong Cham, Svay Rieng
and Prey Veng, driving the number of local residents up by 50 percent over the
last six years, namely from 100,000 in 2002 to 150,000 this year. It is expected to
rise to 185,000 in 2015 and 210,000 in 2020, the paper reported.
Already, fleets of tour buses and a growing army of
motorbike taxi drivers clogged the narrow roads leading to the temples. In the
Angkor park, thousands of pairs of feet tread every day on ancient
stone walkways -- so many that the government is considering requiring visitors to
wear protective plastic slippers. Downtown, hotels sprouted up like mushrooms
and garbage floated in the river.
"There are squatters along the banks. We have an
irrigation web. But actually this irrigation web has become a sewage web because
of development," said Vattho.
Currently, the French government is financing a
5 million U.S.dollars wastewater plant on the east side of the town, while
the government is seeking funds from the Asian Development Bank to build another.
The infrastructure development always lagged behind
the actual need, as over 150 hotels were planned to be built in addition the
current 87, according to the government, which largely encouraged the building
boom as well as the tourism fever rather than regulating it. After all, everyone
could benefit from the boom at current times.
In 2004, international tourists spent 97 million
dollars in Siem Reap, according to official figures. The figures might be
tripled this year.
Local employees in the tourism sector pulled
in salaries totaling 14 million dollars in 2004. More than 5,000 people worked
in hotels alone and overall tourism created about 29,400 jobs in Siem Reap.
To make things worse, international and domestic
efforts to salvage the heritage from predictable destruction were repeatedly
doomed.
In 2003, the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) voted to set up a committee on sustainable tourism,
complete with a panel of experts to evaluate the impact of development plans on
the wide Siem Reap area. But so far, no one provided funding to hire the
experts.
UNESCO started to seek full protection of Angkor,
after the Paris Peace Agreement was established in 1991.
Angkor is now on UNESCO's World Heritage List and the
List of World Heritage in Danger.
Tourism is Cambodia's second largest foreign currency
generator and Angkor contributes the lion's share of the income.
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