Following
Hon'ble PM Narendra Modi's visit to Nepal for the Saarc summit, the
government is mulling a proposal to provide leave travel concession
(LTC) for government employees to four countries — Nepal, Bhutan,
Maldives and Sri Lanka — to boost tourism in the neighbourhood. The LTC
will be modeled on the schemes for the north-east and J&K which
helped increase tourism and fueled economic improvement in the two
regions.
Incidentally,
there has been a sharp dip in tourist arrivals from all four countries
in the last few years. While Sri Lanka remains one of India's top source
countries, tourism arrivals declined by 11% in 2013 while arrivals from
Maldives dropped by 10% between 2012 and 2013. Similarly, the number of tourists from Nepal came down by 9% while Bhutan, which has a small share of tourists (15,016), saw a drop of 1% in the same period.
Sources in the tourism ministry said,
"Introducing LTC for 20 lakh government employees could encourage
greater people to people exchange among the Saarc countries. But there
will have to be some reciprocal arrangement. We are working on that."
Sources said India was in touch with the countries to consider the
proposal's viability.
At the Saarc summit, Modi had highlighted the need for better
connectivity in the region. In his speech, he had said, "It is still
harder to travel within our region than to Bangkok or Singapore; and,
more expensive to speak to each other."
There are a large number of Buddhists in
the region and India hopes to capitalize on that. Besides Lumbini in
Nepal, other significant spots for Buddhists are in India including Bodh
Gaya, Sarnath and Kapilvastu. Modi also flagged off a Kathmandu-Delhi
bus but plans for greater rail and road connectivity were stonewalled
after Pakistan blocked two agreements in Nepal.