Tourists visiting Tiger Hill, Darjeeling’s famous sunrise point, for a glimpse of the Kanchenjungha have to shell out Rs 50 each.
The
forest department’s decision to introduce the entry fee has drawn
objections from tour operators who fear they would have to foot the
expense for all those who have already booked their Puja holidays.
The
travel agents are already at loggerheads with police over restrictions
on the number of vehicles travelling to Tiger Hill every day.
Forest
officials said they had started collecting the Rs 50 fee on September
15 since Tiger Hill falls within the Senchel Wildlife Sanctuary.
The chief wildlife warden of the state is authorised under the
Wildlife (Protection) Act to charge entry fee in protected areas, the
officials said.
“The initiative has been taken also to increase
the revenue collection, around 40 per cent of which will be distributed
among joint forest management committees that are run by people living
in forest villages. The funds can be used for development activities in
their areas,” said Jiju Jeaesper J., the divisional forest officer of
Darjeeling. There are 31 forest villages under the division.
Travel agents, however, alleged that the decision had not been announced and they had not been consulted.
Suresh
Periwal, who has been included in the “hall of fame” of the Indian
Association of Tour Operators, and Samrat Sanyal, general secretary of
the Himalayan Hospitality and Tourism Development Network, said the
sudden imposition of the entry fee would hit travel agents hard.
“We
submit quotations of the itinerary for this season in March-April. Now,
we have no option but to pay from our pockets,” said Periwal, who deals
largely with international tourists.
Sanyal said tourism industry
stakeholders should have been consulted. “This can cause confusion
among tourists. Those who have already booked their trips through travel
operators might refuse to pay the additional money. This would mean
that the operators would have to bear the additional financial burden
for the (Puja) season,” he said.
The Darjeeling Association of Travel Agents (DATA) and the West Bengal Tourism Forum also criticised the decision.
“People
are being charged to see wildlife. When there is no wildlife for
tourists to view, I think the entry fee (at Tiger Hill) might amount to
extortion,” said Pradip Lama, DATA general secretary.
https://www.telegraphindia.com
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