Saturday 5 April 2008

Tourism oh tourism

This morning my husband and I were discussing about the place for our annual family vacation. Considering this year will be my last year in the UK, we thought of several places. Given our limited budget (otherwise we would love to travel to ALL places), we need to find a place which would give us the most value to the (limited available) money we spend, where the children and us can equally have a blast. In the end however, we settled for Disneyland Paris even though we went there 2 years ago.

For those of you who have been to Disneyland Paris, I'm sure you will agree that the place is super-fantastic and it has the X-factor (ie. the ability to make you feel, no matter how old you are, that you are in a fantabulous land and you wish you can stay there forever, well at least until your money runs out hehe). For those of you who haven't, then I can assure you IT IS :). And then there is Paris...the city of love *sigh*.

Now, if you apply the same rule to Brunei as a tourist destination, my question is what is our X-factor? What can we offer to a person who is spending his/her limited budget visiting our country? Or if I were the potential tourist, I ask WHY should I spend my hard-earned 700pounds (or any other amount for that matter) to come to Brunei?

Our quest to become one of THE tourist destinations in the South East Asia, in my opinion, is no easy feat. After all, look at our competitions in the region. However, I also think it is NOT impossible. Our main challenge is not that we don't have the factors that can make us THE tourist destination; rather it is the lack of will, determination and co-ordination among the relevant government departments.

Every time people bring up the issue of tourism, the first thing people talk about is that Brunei is a 'dry' country. The impression I get is that people seem to think that no alcohol= no tourists. What a lame excuse, really. It makes me wonder, do people really travel to consume alcohol (which they can find back home)? Now, before anyone argues FOR the changing of alcohol policy (I'm actually indifferent if the policy is reviewed), let us first look at what we can change without compromising our Islamic faith.

First, let's look at the beaches we have. We have beautiful beaches. Sadly however, the last time I visited them, they were dirty and not to mention the unspeakable state of the public washrooms. And for most of the time, nothing much was happening! Now, my questions are: 1) how expensive can it be to provide the service of beautifying our beaches? For goodness sake, you could even count the number of rubbish bins provided in each beach. For a rich country, I tell you, we are quite stingy! And 2) How difficult can it be to plan 12 types of happening activities for the 12 months of the year?

Next, we have our beloved old Kampong Ayer (Water Village) which is...simply old and dirty. I'm sorry I cannot help but 'smile' every time people mention Brunei being the 'Venice of the East'...Yes... that was aeons ago. Now, I'm not saying that we should just bulldoze Kampong Ayer. In fact, I am FOR preserving it. The challenge now is how to preserve it, beautify it and make it one of Brunei's X Factors. To me, this can only be done if ALL relevant authorities can put their heads together. This - the restoration of Kampong Ayer to its former glory, I believe, is the one project that actually deserves a foreign consultant. There are MANY issues to look into, among others are the sewerage system, an effective rubbish disposal, safety issues such as the fire-breaker system and the electrical system and last but not least, is the ways and means to make it into a desirable habitat of the 21st century!

And then, how about making Brunei into being THE family vacation destination? We used to have Jerudong Park. I tell you, it was the BEST! (At least in this region). Now, it has become a ghost park, which if the stories I heard were true, it really is a GHOST park (hehe). I wrote about JP some time ago (here) and my view still stands. Why aren’t we doing anything about it? Why are we wasting it? There is nothing you can do to UNDO the park so why don’t we make very good use of it? Honestly, I don’t understand. Really, if JP is restored, I think the tourism department won’t even have to spend another cent promoting Brunei.

Oh, and a PROPER Brunei Zoo, please! It is educational, fun and makes a natural (local and foreign) tourist destination.

Anyway, we have to accept the fact that Brunei can never be made into a 'wet and wild party' destination. But it doesn’t mean that Brunei can never be made into one of THE tourist destinations in the region. By declaring VISIT BRUNEI YEAR alone, doesn’t mean Brunei has become that destination. It needs combined efforts, strong will and obviously some spending. Otherwise, Brunei will forever be receiving this, this and this kinds of foreign tourists’ reviews.

Salaam.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

hi, i thought i should let you know that for the past 6 years myself and a group of young entrepreneurs have been trying to push Brunei into a one stop place for paintball, an safe 'extreme' sports.

It took us 2 years plus plus for the police to reply to our letters, and that only happened after we got one of our shipments questioned by customs.

We had to go round and round thru different departments and redtape and made us form an association and then only to say no they couldn't register it, then suggested we set up a company and then after 3 years of operation, they raided our place in Manggis Satu.

We had big plans, but everytime it seems that Brunei cannot do anything without someone very big involved. just like tourism.

Take a look at Malaysia, Malaysia had now developed their paintball sites and have been organising world cup paintball tournaments for the past 2 years. Their hotels around bukit jalil stadium are packed full of paintball players, their support crew, their fans and journalists. You switch on astro and you see paintball tv shows, and 'Platun' is not the first paintball show.

All of this we had discussed with them during our brainstorming in kl back in 2003-2004. It's sad funny since some of their plans and ideas we were involved in its conception,amongst which SEA game paintball is the next step.

However, Brunei is no way near there.

You want to start tourism, forget about Brunei is a dry country,
it's worst, Brunei is a dream-crusher.

Anonymous said...

maybe we should make JP a ghost theme park i.e. a bigger version of 'the haunted house' you get at fun fairs ;)

And bring concerts back!

Anonymous said...

I believe Bruneians need to realize their nation is ranked 5th from the bottom in Southeast Asia, ahead only of US-sanctioned Myanmar, poverty-stricken Cambodia, isolated Laos and war-torn East Timor.

We keep measuring GDP per capita and say ourselves as the second richest in ASEAN, but this measurement itself is not very accurate. Using this measurement Brunei would be richer than industrially-strong countries like S.Korea, Portugal, Russia, Argentina, Mexico and Brazil; With this same measurement Qatar would be richer than USA (huh??), tiny HongKong would be richer than UK (ridiculous!), the small African country Equatorial Guinea would be richer than Canada (nonsense!)

If you take a tour around Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok, Jakarta, Manila and Ho Chi Minh, look at their airports, seaports, industrial zones, factories and business districts.. you won't see anything less developed than Brunei. Heck, the GDP of any one of those cities alone is greater than the GDP of whole Brunei.

Within ASEAN itself, Singapore is the financial hub, Thailand is the top tourist destination, Malaysia has the most billionaires, Vietnam has the strongest economic growth, Indonesia is the center for low-cost labors. I can't remember the what Brunei rank? Oil & Gas?

Brunei wants to promote its tourism - launching Visit Brunei Year this and that, but RBA keeps terminating its flight destinations, and anyone know Miri Airport has already surpassed Brunei last year? They now handle more passengers every year than Brunei International Airport. Then come eco-tourism, Brunei as a rich country does not spend its pool of money developing the eco-tourism infrastructure, allowing Sabah & Sarawak to trump over it.

Projects to diversify economic dependence on oil also don't seem to have much success. Brunei wanna be an International Islamic Banking Center like Bahrain, Qatar or Kuwait. To do that you need to connect Islamic banks worldwide, and get them to setup their regional headquarter in Brunei, like how many banking institutions setup their regional headquarter in Singapore. So far none has done so... IBB, Takaful, TAIB, etc don't count.

Brunei's next proposal is to develop its IT industry. I believe its going to fail again considering how weak Brunei IT industry currently is. I personally think its better for the government to use its $ acquiring some big international IT companies & move a portion of their operation base to Brunei. This help raise local awareness to IT, like how Singapore government owns 11.55% stake in Standard Chartered bank, 4.765% in Bank of China, 2.1% in Barclays Bank (3rd largest UK bank), 9.9% in Merrill Lynch, 10% of ICICI Bank (India largest private bank), 10% of Hana Financial (S.Korea 3rd largest bank)

I just think we need to do something before Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia and East Timor catch up on us.