North India’s golden triangle of Delhi, Agra and Jaipur now has a holy rival in the east. While Prayagraj and Varanasi were already drawing crores of pilgrims every year, newly spruced-up Ayodhya has joined their league. Last year, the three UP cities together had close to 15 crore visitors – almost half of the state’s 32-crore tourist traffic. If the opening of Kashi-Vishwanath Corridor made Varanasi a magnet, Ram Mandir is expected to do the same for Ayodhya. The town’s tourist footfall has already shot up from nearly 3.5 lakh in 2019 to over 2 crore in both 2022 and 2023. “Interest in Ayodhya has gone up exponentially. “All properties and allied services like taxis are sold out from January 15 to 25. The demand is high after the (temple consecration) event as well. And over 80% of tourists are pilgrims.”
While Prayagraj is a steady draw, averaging
around 4 crore arrivals in most years, Varanasi has jumped to the top with 8.4
crore visitors last year, as against over 60 lakh in 2017. Temple visits boost
businesses involved in transportation, food and lodging, sacred offerings,
sightseeing, entertainment and shopping. “The economic potential of each of
these activities gives good return on investment.Job creation from tourism in
the holy triangle will slow down migration to Delhi-NCR and Mumbai. The
increasing popularity of these temple towns could also boost tourism in nearby
places. For instance, Chhapaiya, barely 60km from Ayodhya, is the birthplace of
Akshardham sect founder Swaminarayan. Similarly, Gorakhpur, Sravasti and
Kushinagar are all about 2.5 hours from Ayodhya.
All
three centres now have air connectivity, and Lucknow isn’t far away, so the
entire central-east UP region has become accessible to high-spending tourists,
which has got the hotel industry interested. Tourism to the
Ayodhya-Varanasi-Prayagraj triangle could drive UP’s trillion-dollar-economy
dream. “It is for this that tourism and culture have been placed in the list of
top 10 focus sectors. “The goal is to increase tourist inflow in UP by about
1.4 times in the next five years, and the per-tourist spend by about three
times.” Strictly speaking, “tourist” is a visitor who spends at least one night
at a destination, and to spur the tourism economy the state government wants
more than day visitors. But to get more tourists you need “engaging options
like a museum, or a boat ride, or soundand-light show.
But
the sudden popularity of these places has created a demand-supply mismatch,
pricing out many potential tourists. For example, some hotels in Varanasi
charge Rs 1 lakh or more for a night on special occasions like Dev Deepavali.
This is “stealing the simplicity for which Varanasi was known. 50 starred hotel
projects, including from groups like Taj, Marriott, Oberoi, Leela and Lalit,
have got their projects approved for the three holy cities.
No comments:
Post a Comment