Record number of Japanese to go abroad during Golden Week: JTB

June 17, 2006

A record number of Japanese are expected to go abroad during this year's Golden Week holiday season from late April to early May, JTB Corp. said Thursday. An estimated 565,000 people are likely to leave Japan for overseas tours between April 26 and May 6, up 3.9 percent from a year earlier for an all-time high since JTB began the survey in 1969, the biggest Japanese travel agency said.

Keidanren calls for updating tourism law

June 17, 2006

Japan should update its tourism law, which was established more than 40 years ago, to increase the number of foreign tourists and stimulate domestic travel as well, the Japan Business Federation said in a report Wednesday. Japan's biggest business lobby, better known as Nippon Keidanren, said the nation needs to introduce a new law promoting tourism with unified goals and measures to be implemented across a broader area than at present. Training more experts on tourism at national and local government levels is also necessary, it said.

EU poised to promote tourism in the region

June 17, 2006

The European Union on Tuesday presented a plan to promote further tourism in Europe and make it more visible to the world, a spokesman told reporters. ''The main aim of the renewed European tourism policy is to improve the competitiveness of the European tourism industry and create more and better jobs through the sustainable growth of tourism in Europe and globally,'' Commissioner for Enterprise and Industry Guenter Verheugen said.

FEATURE: Indochinese countries promote overland tourism

June 17, 2006

(EDS: ONE PHOTO ACCOMPANYING THIS STORY IS AVAILABLE VIA E-MAIL. THE PHOTO ADVISORY IS TO FOLLOW) In 1989, following the end of the Cold War and civil wars in Indochina, then Thai Prime Minister Chatichai Choonhavan advocated transforming Indochina ''from a battlefield into a marketplace.''

FEATURE: Tottori private company attempts public tourism facility management

June 17, 2006

Furusato Shikano Co. in the city of Tottori on the Sea of Japan coast is expected to earn a profit during the current fiscal year ending this month after coming into being as a private company in October 2004 to look after five tourism facilities formerly under management of the local municipality. The facilities include a hot spring inn and a place where tourists can gain firsthand experience in kneading flour into ''soba'' noodles.

LDP lawmakers to draft bill promoting ecotourism

June 17, 2006

The Liberal Democratic Party on Friday began work to introduce legislation promoting ecotourism that aims to promote the economy of an area rich in natural heritage while preserving its environment. The move was initiated by about 10 LDP lawmakers, including Masahito Moriyama, who were newly elected in last year's House of Representatives election as the so-called ''Koizumi children.''

Robust tourism growth faces challenges, U.N. warns

June 17, 2006

The sustainability of the Asian tourism industry relies on how well the countries are coping with natural disasters, and political, economic and health-related uncertainties, the United Nations World Tourism Organization said Tuesday. The Asia-Pacific region has been a magnet for tourists, with a growth rate of 7 percent in 2005, compared with a global growth of 5.5 percent, UNWTO Secretary General Francesco Frangialli said.

Anti-Japan demonstrations dent overseas travel

June 17, 2006

Rising anti-Japan sentiments in China and South Korea since May last year have apparently prompted Japanese travelers to avoid visiting these two countries, the government said in a report released Tuesday. The 2005 white paper on tourism said the number of Japanese visiting overseas destinations last year rose 3.4 percent from the previous year to 17.4 million, but growth was affected after May 2005 when Japan-South Korea relations were strained over a territorial row and China saw a surge in anti-Japan demonstrations.

APEC eyes direct flights to members' World Heritage sites

June 17, 2006

The 21 members of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum will consider opening direct flight routes to their cultural World Heritage sites from major APEC cities during a meeting of tourism ministers slated for October in Vietnam, APEC sources said Monday. During the first meeting of senior officials of APEC economies held in March in Hanoi, Vietnam, this year's host country, suggested tourism cooperation measures such as simplifying travel procedures, facilitating connecting tours and the direct flights to the cultural heritage sites.