TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Thursday, 25th December 2025
Page 2313

Tourism stalwart Julia Noordraven dies

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JULIA Noordraven, a veteran in Indonesia’s tourism industry, passed away in Kuala Lumpur last night at the age of 81. The funeral takes place today in Bandung.

Julia had spent two days in Kuala Lumpur being treated for a heart problem in the city’s State Heart Institute.

Julia was president director of Vista Express Tour & Travel, one of Indonesia’s pioneering travel companies. Vista Express, which has been in business since 1973, helped to open up Indonesia as a port of call in the early 1990s.

Indah Wisata Melawai Chapter’s travel consultant, Theo Setlight, who had been with Vista Express then, remembers Julia as a “hands-on” leader.

He said: “(The port openings) started when the company won business from Hapag-Lloyd. MS Europa was the first cruise ship visiting Ambon (Maluku). After that, new destinations followed such as Agats (West Papua) and Bitung (North Sulawesi), which were remote places with no proper facilities for cruises.

“This happened because of Julia’s eagerness to show off Indonesia’s exoticism, her leadership and determination in putting out the best service. She had always been hands-on with the preparations.”

India-Slovenia flights to increase with Air India, Adria Airways deal

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SLOVENIA-BASED Adria Airways yesterday inked a codeshare pact with Air India, weeks before the planned launch of a jointly operated New Delhi-Ljubljana service.

The agreement was signed by Rohit Nandan, chairman and managing director, Air India, and Mark Anzur, CEO, Adria Airways, in New Delhi.

Said Anzur: “We will have daily flights from New Delhi to Ljubljana with a stopover in Frankfurt. Air India is the operating carrier for New Delhi to Frankfurt, and Adria from Frankfurt to Ljubljana. We are hopeful that air traffic between both countries will witness an increase with the codeshare agreement, thus strengthening our tourism ties.”

The service is expected to commence by the second week of December. Indian arrivals to Slovenia numbered 5,000 in 2012.

Adria is a member of Star Alliance, a point of significance for Air India, which is keen to join the alliance.

Air India, Aerodrom Ljubljana and Adria had previously signed an MoU in June 2012 to forge greater cooperation and improve traffic between the two countries, clearing the way for yesterday’s codeshare agreement. Earlier this year Adria also appointed Dex Aviation as its general sales agent for India (TTG Asia e-Daily, March 26, 2013).

Pelican rolls out social-booking capabilities for hotels

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PELICAN Hotel Solutions is serving up a new solution that will allow hotels to harness the power of social media to attract potential guests.

This takes the shape of a widget that can be added to hotel website booking pages, through a tie-up with social seating and booking platform SeatID.

Potential guests log into their choice of social network, Facebook or Linkedin, and are shown a list of social network contacts who have stayed at the hotel, user comments, the number of likes, and evidence of multiple bookings.

According to Pelican, this represents the first implementation of social widgets for ticketing and booking websites in the hospitality industry, and is already in use by Wharney Guang Dong Hotel Hong Kong.

Hartono Liman, CEO of Pelican Hotel Solutions, commented that social booking is “one of the latest and most innovative trends in online booking”.

Malaysia drums up regional publicity with week-long fam

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TOURISM Malaysia is running a special week-long programme for tour operators, celebrities and the media from around South-east Asia this week, the country’s largest source of tourists.

Known as the ASEAN Explore Quest Malaysia 2013, the NTO has invited 92 people to participate in the trip and explore Malaysia’s various destinations. The programme, held in conjunction with the upcoming Visit Malaysia Year (VMY) 2014, began on Monday and will end on Sunday.

Mirza Mohammad Taiyab, director-general of Tourism Malaysia, said: “With good land connectivity, an established network of low-cost regional airlines and a growing trend of impulse travel among urban working adults and families, South-east Asia will remain by far the top source market for Malaysia’s tourist arrivals in the coming years.”

He described the week-long programme as an “educational tour” as participants will get a first-hand experience of the tourism products in Kuala Lumpur, Perak and Langkawi. “Throughout the journey, participants will be exposed to various tourism elements such as local cultures, heritage, nature and luxury tourism.

“By giving travel consultants a first-hand experience of the various parts of Malaysia, we hope they can provide exciting and attractive holiday packages, while the media can share first-hand experiences with their readers and South-east Asian celebrities can help to boost the promotion of the country’s tourist destinations and raise awareness of VMY 2014 through social media and their fan clubs.”

Krizia Tan, manager at Davao-based Travel Best Guide, said she would be able to better promote Malaysia to her customers and come up with innovative packages having experienced the attractions first-hand.

Arrivals from South-east Asia last year numbered 18.8 million, or 75.1 per cent of the 25 million tourists to Malaysia. The country is aiming for 28 million arrivals to Malaysia during VMY 2014, of which 20.6 million are expected to come from the region.

Thailand must avoid reaching breaking point: tourism secretary

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THAILAND must focus on attracting quality tourists instead of the mass market or risk straining the country’s infrastructure to breaking point, said the permanent tourism and sports secretary.

Suwat Sidthilaw said that an arrival growth rate of around three per cent would be more sustainable in the long term than the current 20 per cent.

“Income is more important than numbers,” he said. “That means (attracting) quality tourists should play a key part in our strategy.”

“Ideally we don’t want more than 20 to 25 million tourists (annually). We only have limited resources and we are already facing infrastructure and capacity problems.”

Suwat, who opposes the current proposal to waive visa requirements for Chinese tourists, said Thailand started experiencing problems when visitor numbers exceeded 20 million last year. The country received 21.7 million tourists from January to October, according to the Tourism Authority of Thailand, and is targeting 28 million international tourists next year up from 22.3 million in 2012.

“We don’t have enough buses, guides or hotels. Hotels are not happy with the situation. Tour operators are (the only people) really benefiting,” said Suwat.

Thailand’s hotel market is struggling to keep up with the demand for low to midscale accommodation, as over 70 per cent of properties coming up in the next few years are in the upscale segment, according to STR Global.

Jesper Blomqvist, Asia-Pacific area director at STR Global, said: “There are not enough mid-scale hotels coming in to meet demand…Where are the mass tourists going to stay?”

SIA prepares for smooth take-off with Tata Sons

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SINGAPORE Airlines (SIA) is confident that its joint-venture carrier with Tata Sons will take off smoothly, as it prepares for the New Delhi-based, full-service airline to start operations mid-next year (TTG Asia e-Daily, September 20, 2013).

Following the verbal approval on October 24 by the Foreign Investment Promotion Board in India, Goh Choon Phong, CEO of SIA, said the carrier is now awaiting further official clearance.

Explaining that the new airline is SIA’s strategy in participating directly in a “huge growth market”, Goh said: “The choice of India is obvious due to its immense market potential with its increasing middle-class population. The number of trips per capita in India is still very low at 0.04, compared to China which is 0.3 and developed countries like the US and Europe at 2.

“This allows us to diversify our traffic base and not just depend on the Singapore base,” he added.

“There are challenges (such as the competitive domestic market) and we are not taking them lightly. But we have the confidence to make this work otherwise we would not go in there.”

During a media briefing today, Goh also revealed SIA’s operating profit of S$87 million (US$70 million) for the second quarter of the 2013-14 financial year, which was up by 24.3 per cent year-on-year. The group net profit for this period registered a 78 per cent increase to S$160 million.

In a separate media statement this morning, the carrier announced that travellers flying SIA and SilkAir will enjoy 10kg extra in baggage allowance across all classes from November 15. Economy customers will be entitled to 30kg of baggage, up from 20kg now, while business class passengers will be allowed 40kg from the current 30kg.

Jazz festival returns to Hua Hin in 2014

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THE Hua Hin Jazz Festival will be coming back to Hua Hin’s beaches this coming June, with opportunities to partner and resell Hua Hin Jazz Festival travel packages.

Lauded the most recognised and established jazz festival in Thailand’s jazz scene, next year’s edition will tentatively take place between June 20 to 22 as dates have not been officially finalised.

According to a press release by organisers B-Concept Media Entertainment Group, the festival will offer a “broader international and local jazz line-up”.

“Environmental issues will be addressed, international production standards will be implemented. Stronger partnerships will be developed that sustain the Hua Hin Jazz Festival for the future,” it said.

Special travel packages for consumers will soon be launched on the official festival website, while partners who are interested in publishing and reselling Hua Hin Jazz Festival packages can contact Ezy-go.com and become an affiliate.

The Hua Hin Jazz Festival was first organised by local hotels, drawing more than 15,000 locals and travellers to the town.

Panorama jumps into luxury market with Insight Vacations appointment

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INSIGHT Vacations has appointed Panorama Tours its Preferred Sales Agent in Indonesia, heralding the outbound travel company’s entry into the luxury segment.

Hellen Xu, managing director, travel management, Panorama Tours, said the partnership would allow her company to sell Insight Vacations’ products directly to customers and through its wholesaler and consolidator subsidiary, DRP Wholesaler, to retailers in Indonesia.

“We are happy to partner Insight Vacations to enhance our product offerings, reaching out to the luxury market segment to meet the needs of the market,” said Xu.

Panorama has already begun selling next year’s itineraries following the release of Insight Vacations’ 2014 brochures and has a target of 1,000 travellers for the whole year.

Sheryl Lim, regional director of Asia, Insight Vacations, said: “We have seen a tremendous change in Indonesian market trends in the last five years. Although it has not reached the level (of sophistication) of the Singapore market, it took 10 years for the Singapore market to reach the level of the Indonesian market today while it took the latter only five years. I believe the Indonesians will catch up with the Singaporeans within three years.”

With Panorama’s appointment, Insight Vacations is expected to develop a stronger presence in the South-east Asian country. The latter is no newcomer to Indonesia, having been present for over 20 years through its partnership with Antavaya Tours.

Said John Boulding, president and CEO of Insight Vacations: “We came here during the Tiger Boom in the 1980s and our business was quite strong at that time.

“As the ‘tiger’ died (in the 1997 financial crisis), we lost our attraction and it took some time to build up again…So, we have (always) been here but have not been very active.

“We feel now is a really good opportunity for us to grow our business.”

Jet Asia Airways launches scheduled Tokyo services

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JET Asia Airways has taken another step into scheduled flight territory with the recent launch of twice-weekly charter services between Bangkok and Tokyo.

Flights from Suvarnabhumi Airport depart every Sunday and Tuesday at 00.45 to arrive at Tokyo’s Narita International Airport at 09.15. Return flights leave Tokyo every Wednesday and Friday at 14.00 and touch down in Bangkok at 18.30 the same day.

“The recent waiver for Thais travelling to Japan has sparked an influx of Thais travelling to Japan and is the driving force of our service to Narita,” said Veerawat Singhamany, marketing manager at Jet Asia Airways in a press release.

The Bangkok-based carrier is increasingly moving away from a traditional model reliant on charter flights towards scheduled services (TTG Asia e-Daily, September 27, 2013), and intends to launch fully scheduled flights by 2014.

Haiyan-devastated Visayas needs rehabilitation for tourism revival: PTAA

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VISAYAS must undergo a rehabilitation programme before promotions and marketing for the area as a tourist destination can start again, said Philippine Travel Agencies Association (PTAA) president, John Paul Cabalza.

Super typhoon Haiyan, locally known as Yolanda, has already rendered millions homeless and is feared to have claimed more than 10,000 lives.

According to PTAA’s check on their partners, counterparts and tourist destinations in the affected areas, Boracay is now accessible as the airports in Kalibo and Caticlan have reopened.

In Palawan, Coron has been wrecked but Puerto Princesa remains intact. Bantayan and Camotes in Cebu were battered by the typhoon, while towns in Leyte and Samar have been levelled.

Given the massive destruction wrought, Cabalza pointed out: “The affected destinations would have a hard time, at this point, to promote their areas. It’s already a given (as) it’s difficult to go there.”

He said ensuring the safety of travellers and kickstarting a rehabilitation programme for infrastructure are therefore paramount. “If the airport is not usable, if road networks are not passable, if electricity and communication lines are not working…it will be difficult to promote (the area to tourists).”

On how PTAA will be assisting in relief efforts, Cabalza said: “Once we are given the ‘go’ signal, the best way for us in PTAA really is to assist in terms of coordinating with tourism offices in their respective provinces in the needed sales, marketing and endorsement efforts.”

Wanda Teo, president of the National Association of Independent Travel Agencies, said: “We can still encourage tourists to come to our country as there are other tourist spots that were not devastated by the typhoon.”