TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Sunday, 28th December 2025
Page 2164

ICAO tackles lack of comprehensive threat information in aviation

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GLOBAL aviation authorities have condemned the gunning down of Malaysia Airlines MH17, and pledged to cooperate on building stronger information frameworks and tackling the issue of arms manufacture, in order to prevent a repeat of the tragedy that claimed 298 lives.

ICAO convened a high-level meeting consisting of representation from IATA, Airports Council International (ACI), and the Civil Air Navigation Services Organization (CANSO) in Montreal yesterday to discuss how to do that.

All attendant organisations agreed to the immediate establishment of a senior-level task force composed of state and industry experts to begin work straightaway on addressing the civil aviation and national security aspects arising from MH17, in particular how information can be effectively collected and disseminated. Findings by the task force will submitted soonest possible to a Special Meeting of the ICAO Council for action.

The industry has further called on ICAO to make fail-safe channels where essential threat information can be made available to civil aviation authorities and the industry.

Said Tony Tyler, director general and CEO of IATA: “We were told that flights traversing Ukraine’s territory at above 32,000 feet would not be in harm’s way. We now know how wrong that guidance was. It is essential that airlines receive clear guidance regarding threats to their passengers, crew and aircraft. Such information must be accessible in an authoritative, accurate, consistent, and unequivocal way. This is the responsibility of states. There can be no excuses. Even sensitive information can be sanitised and still remain operationally relevant.”

ICAO and partners are also aiming to push into international law through UN frameworks, measures governing the design, manufacture and deployment of modern anti-aircraft weaponry.

“Weapons of war – including powerful anti-aircraft weaponry – are also in the hands of non-state entities. We have conventions that address chemical, nuclear, and biological weapons, plastic explosives and weapons trade generally. But there is no international law or convention to manage them as exists for many other forms of weaponry. MH17 shows us that this is a gap in the international system which must be closed,” commented Tyler in an IATA release.

Kuala Lumpur-bound MH17 had departed from Amsterdam and was flying through Ukrainian airspace with 298 people on board when it was shot down by an anti-aircraft missile, killing all on board (TTG Asia e-Daily, July 22, 2014).

The incident has led to a host of questions from all stakeholders in the industry about who determines whether a flight route, especially those over war zones, is safe for travel.

USS gives MICE delegates something to scream about

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THEME park Universal Studios Singapore (USS) is launching its first-ever MICE packages for the annual Halloween Horror Nights (HHN) scare fest, offering themed dinners and special treats as part of the deals.

This year, HHN will run from 19.30 to 01.30 over five weekends: October 3-5, 10-11, 17-18, 22-25, 31 and November 1.

Planners can choose from three packages – A,B, and C – that include a Halloween-themed dinner, with add-on options including express passes, R.I.P Tours and extra rides.

Package A is available on all HHN event dates and include standard admission to HHN, pre-event buffet dinner, free-flow soft drinks, and a one-time Express Pass to one haunted house. The package is valid for groups of at least 50 pax, at S$120++ (US$97) per person.

Package B features standard admission to HHN, pre-dinner canapés and free-flow soft drinks, pre-event buffet dinner, a one-time Express Pass to one haunted house, a Scare Actor Meet & Greet at the dinner venue, and a Halloween souvenir for every guest. The deal is valid on all HHN event dates for a group with a minimum of 150 pax at S$170++ per person.

Package C is available on non-HHN event dates for the month of October, and the standing-only event will be held at New York City and Sci-Fi City. It offers entry to the scare zone in New York City and the haunted house at Sound Stage 28, pre-dinner canapés and free-flow soft drinks, a Halloween themed buffet dinner, and a Halloween souvenir for every guest.

Organisers may wish to top up an additional S$17 per pax to include an additional ride, available for the first two hours of the event. Package C is open to groups with at least 250 attendees, starting from S$240 per pax.

Further add-on options include Universal Express passes, R.I.P Tours, and cocktail receptions.

Central to this year’s HNN is the demonic Minister of Evil character, who is implementing a dystopian new world order at USS. HNN 2014 boasts one more haunted house over last year’s, including Singapore’s first 3-D haunted house, and one more scare zone (TTG Asia e-Daily, July 25, 2014).

Amadeus adds Alipay payment option

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AMADEUS is helping its customers tap the Chinese travel market by integrating Chinese online payment service provider, Alipay, into the Amadeus Payment Platform.

The partnership, announced today, allows Amadeus users to offer Chinese travellers the option of settling payments via Alipay, which is used by millions of registered Chinese consumers.

“With this collaboration we add a key payment provider to our platform to satisfy our customers’ payment needs. Our travel-payment expertise, combined with Alipay’ market penetration and the ease of using Alipay’s products, will provide our customers with the right solution to meet Chinese payment demands,” said Celia Pereiro, head of Amadeus Travel Payments.

China was ranked by UN World Tourism Organization as the world’s top-spending tourism market in 2012 (TTG Asia e-Daily, April 8, 2013).

India lays out plans for 50 new airports by 2017

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THE Ministry of Civil Aviation (MoCA) will build 50 new airports in non-metropolitan cities to the tune of Rs15 billion (US$249.5 million) within the next few years.

Part of the new Union budget announced by the government earlier this month (TTG Asia e-Daily, July 11, 2014), the plan will see no-frills airports come up in Tier Two and Three cities such as Navi Mumbai, Juhu, Goa, Kannur, Pune, Sriperumbudur, and Bellary by 2017, said civil aviation minister Ashok Gajapathi Raju.

Night parking charges at these airports will be waived, added minister of state for civil aviation GM Siddeshwara.

The said airports are part of India’s grand plan to have 200 new airports within the next decade.

Meanwhile existing airports at Bhopal, Indore and Raipur will be upgraded to international airports, paving the way for another 10 airports in secondary cities to go international by 2020.

Non-metropolitan airports presently account for 30 per cent of air traffic and are expected to reach 45 per cent by 2017.

India’s current airport capacity totals 121 million domestic travellers and 41 million international. With the new airports, India will be geared to handle 336 million domestic and 85 million international passengers by 2020.

Wave of developments sweeps across Mergui

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DEVELOPMENTS in Myanmar’s Mergui archipelago could see the area flourish as a major tourist destination, especially for marine tourism.

Myeik Public Corporation is planning to invest US$4 million in the development of a resort hotel on Kadan Island, which is located in the archipelago.

The company had earlier announced that it would invest US$10 million for projects on four other islands, but has shifted its focus to Kadan, which is 24km west of the region’s commercial hub, Myeik, although the project is still awaiting confirmation from local authorities (TTG Asia e-Daily, February 6, 2014).

The islands are attracting interest from tourists and investors because there is “practically no sign of human habitation or development”, according to Marek Lenarcik, sales and marketing director of Tour Mandalay.

The islands offer particular potential in the field of marine tourism, says John Farrell, manager at Myanmar Yacht Services. “If done correctly, there is huge potential for turning the islands into a popular yachting destination.”

Just 50 private yachts and dive boats visit the region each year currently, with the majority of visitors coming from Russia, the UK and the US, with a few coming from the Asia-Pacific, said Farrell.

He added that there has been a substantial increase in visitors in recent months, with nearly all visitors travelling from Phuket.

Burma Boating also announced recently that it will double its fleet of classic yachts servicing Mergui to four for the coming season.

VietJet takes off for Seoul

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VIETJET Air has launched its first daily direct flights to the South Korean capital of Seoul (Incheon) from Hanoi and Danang, adding the city to its list of international destinations that includes Singapore and Bangkok.

From Hanoi, flights depart Noi Bai International Airport at 01.45, while flights take off from Da Nang International Airport at 02.00. Both flights leave Incheon at 11.05.

The carrier has named Seyou its general sales agent within the Asia-Pacific region and will launch more joint ventures with regional airline partners. It will grow ticketing channels throughout all existing sales touchpoints to meet the increasing travel demands between South Korea and Vietnam.

VietJet’s managing director said in a previous interview with TTG Asia e-Daily that the airline is embarking on an ambitious phase of growth, and is looking to add charter destinations and more longhaul routes (TTG Asia e-Daily, May 8, 2014) to its flight network.

At the Singapore Airshow in February, VietJet placed an order for 63 Airbus aircraft (TTG Asia e-Daily, February 12, 2014).

Puss in Boots stomps his way into USS

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UNIVERSAL Studios Singapore (USS) has let the cat out of the bag – DreamWorks Animation’s irrepressible Puss in Boots is to become the centre of two new attractions to open in the park by year-end.

Resorts World Sentosa (RWS), DreamWorks Animation and Universal Parks & Studios are working on a new suspended roller coaster ride named Puss in Boots’ Giant Journey, RWS announced today.

The ride located in the Far Far Away themed zone takes theme park visitors into the giant’s castle now overgrown by a magical beanstalk, alongside Puss and his accomplice, Kitty Soft Paws.

Further details of the ride’s launch will be announced at a later date.

John Hallenbeck, senior vice president of attractions at RWS, said: “We are excited to expand our collaboration with DreamWorks Animation. DreamWorks characters have been popular and the expansion will allow our guests to experience more of Puss in Boots, a franchise beloved by families and youths. The new ride is designed on the popularity of our other crowd-pleasing suspended roller coaster, and will cater to not only families but thrill-seekers as well.”

Meanwhile, Puss and Kitty will star in a new stage show from September. Titled The Dance for the Magic Beans, the 20-minute show will also include a meet-and-greet show with the characters.

The new roller coaster ride brings USS’ number of DreamWorks attractions to seven.

USS last week unveiled the theme and pricings for this year’s Halloween Horror Nights, an annual scare fest that has become a calendar event for tourism in Singapore (TTG Asia e-Daily, July 25, 2014).

Best Western prepares to open 3rd Phuket hotel

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BEST Western International will unveil the Best Western Patong Beach hotel in October this year, close to the centre of Phuket’s thriving tourism scene.

The 224-room hotel is less than 1km from Patong Beach’s white sands and a host of bars, restaurants and entertainment venues.

Guestrooms and suites come with 32-inch LCD TVs, mini bars, and tea- and coffee-making facilities. Other amenities to be found on the property include free Wi-Fi throughout the property, an outdoor infinity pool, Mana Restaurant for local and international cuisine, a poolside bar, a fitness centre and a business centre.

Best Western Patong Beach is the company’s 13th hotel in Thailand and the third in Phuket, joining Best Western Premier Bantao Beach Resort & Spa and Best Western Phuket Ocean Resort Phuket.

Betting Big

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Integrated resorts are gaining a fast foothold across Asian countries eager to boost tourism, and Sri Lanka is now mulling whether to raise its stakes in casino development

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In a bid to attract high rollers to the fledgling tourism industry, the Sri Lankan government has plans to introduce high-end casinos into the country through three integrated resort (IR) projects in the capital, Colombo, although efforts have been thwarted by a strong Buddhist clergy and opposition parliamentarians.

Protests urging the government to ban upmarket casinos have been held around the site of Australian casino mogul James Packer’s resort in Colombo. The other two IRs are by John Keells Holdings (JKH), owner of Sri Lanka’s largest hotel chain; and businessman Dhammika Perera, owner of three existing casinos.

The government has bowed to the protests and approved the three resorts sans casinos. Unofficial JKH sources said the company is proceeding with its resort with or without a casino, which is just a small part of the resort compared with its 2,500-pax convention centre. The other two resorts declined to comment.

Some inbound trade players believe that the emotive protests seem out of place in Sri Lanka, which already has five casinos in Colombo, albeit mostly for foreigners, as well as hundreds of horse racing betting shops.

“We need the casinos,” said Mahen Kariyawasam, president of Sri Lanka Association of Inbound Tour Operators. “And if one is to argue about morals and cultural norms, what about the existing casinos and many betting shops?”

Chandra Wickramasinghe, chairman, Connaissance De Ceylan, agreed: “There is nothing new to complain about; we have been having casinos. Only now the sector is being enhanced with more facilities.”

Wickramasinghe argues that Sri Lanka needs to attract all kinds of travellers, especially if the country is aiming for 2.5 million tourists by 2016, up from below 500,000 in 2009. The casinos can be used to attract the very rich niche gambling segment whose patrons come in on special carriers, he opined.

Luxe Asia executive director, Chaminda Dias, remarked: “If we are to attract 2.5 million tourists, we need to provide something in Colombo which will always be the centre of tourism, and huge benefits come from casinos. (We are told that) the new upmarket casinos will be well regulated and would be strictly for foreigners, so there won’t be much of a cultural or moral impact.”

Said Athula Amarasekera, an urban planner and director at Singapore-based Design Team 3 with several projects in Sri Lanka: “Casinos have branded and developed themselves as comprehensive MICE locations than mere casinos, which add value to the city as a destination.”

More nightlife options needed

Another issue, Kariyawasam pointed out, is Colombo’s dearth of night attractions and entertainment options, which is needed to cater to the steady growth of Indian, Chinese and South Korean visitors.

Hapugoda concurred: “We need to attract the rich Chinese and Indians with all-night shopping and high-class restaurants.”

Amarasekera added: “Cities like Dubai and Bangkok are major tourist destinations without casinos but they have other major attractions including iconic architecture, quality shopping, world-class restaurants or river rides. In Colombo, you get bored after one night.”

Indeed, most tourists visiting Sri Lanka rarely visit Colombo or spend just a day or two in the capital, which is about 30km from the international airport. Hotels drawing mostly business travellers often complain about the lack of nightlife in the city, where there are just a few nightclubs and pubs, and most restaurants close by 23.00.

Furthermore, according to official figures, 75 new hotels will be constructed in Sri Lanka in the next three years with a total of 5,300 rooms, of which 2,080 will be in Colombo. Queried a government spokesperson: “When we reach 10,000 rooms (in the next few years – registered and unregistered) in the city, what would tourists do at night?”

Welcoming the government’s move to develop McCallum Road (where two of the controversial IR projects are to be located) as an exclusive leisure, recreation and entertainment zone, Surath Wickremasinghe, Colombo-based urban planner and president of the Chamber of Construction, opined: “We are building hotels at a rate. There are hundreds of new rooms coming up in Colombo but where are the entertainment facilities, a prerequisite for tourists?”

In the footsteps of neighbours

The success of Singapore, which gradually allowed casinos after years of reluctance, has also been cited by the authorities to counter public criticism. Said Srilal Miththapala, former president of Tourist Hotels Association and now a tourism consultant: “When Singapore found tourism growth slowing down, it realised the need for new products to stimulate and rejuvenate tourism. The two casinos have jump-started Singapore tourism, which is growing exponentially again.”

Malin Hapugoda, managing director of Aitken Spence Hotels, agreed: “If we are expecting to bring in many tourists then we have to follow markets with the emerging casino sector. Even Muslim Malaysia has casinos.” He suggests Sri Lanka follow Singapore’s example of charging local residents entry fees to the casinos to discourage gambling.

Apart from Singapore, IRs are already a vital component of tourism development in several Asian countries including Macau, Malaysia, South Korea and a likely new entrant, Japan.

South Korea forbids its citizens to gamble at casinos (except at an inconvenient location south-east of Seoul) and currently has 16 foreigner-only casinos. Meanwhile, Resorts World Jeju is scheduled to open in stages from 2017, with owner Genting Singapore expecting to break ground in 3Q2014.

Over in Japan where lotteries, pachinko and betting on horse and boat races are already legal, the government is also close to legalising casino gambling ahead of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics to boost tourism. Prime minister Shinzo Abe last month visited Singapore’s two IRs, where he was quoted as saying gaming has achieved great success there, and Japan would need to consider policies to prevent crime and gambling addiction, as Singapore has done.

Tune Hotels property opens in Malaysia’s Cyberjaya

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TUNE Hotels is offering business travellers another accommodation option with the opening of a property in Cyberjaya, dubbed Malaysia’s Silicon Valley.

The 162-room Tune Hotel DPulze Cyberjaya in the heart of the central business district is part of the DPulze Cyberjaya integrated development that comprises hotels, apartments and a shopping centre.

Tune Hotels group CEO, Mark Lankester, said: “With its high concentration of multinational establishments, Cyberjaya is undoubtedly one of Malaysia’s most international satellite towns to Kuala Lumpur, apart from being one of the most technologically advanced and best planned.

“We look forward to providing international-class, value-for-money accommodation to not only business but also leisure travellers to Cyberjaya. Corporate and business enquiries have been very healthy indeed.”

Lankester revealed the hotel benefits from having two floors of the Regus Business Centres, providing serviced offices, and conference and meeting rooms within the property.

He added: “Sitting directly above the DPulze Shopping Centre (which opens next month), the hotel is perfectly placed with easy access to all the shopping and entertainment facilities within.”

As part of opening celebrations, the hotel is offering its rooms at all-inclusive promotional rates from RM88 (US$27.70). Bookings can be made from now until August 3, 2014 for immediate stays up to October 31, 2014.