TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Monday, 29th December 2025
Page 2354

Global culinary, hospitality experts to convene in KL this month

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FOOD & Hotel Malaysia (FHM) will see its largest ever gathering this year, with a 30 per cent increase in floor space and a 40 per cent growth in participating companies.

To be held at Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre from September 17 to 20, FHM 2013 is expected to draw 1,400 exhibitors from 50 nations and an estimated 20,000 visitors, according to organiser Alun Jones.

It will be held alongside the biennial Culinaire Malaysia event, which will see more than 1,000 culinary professionals from hotels and restaurants in attendance as well as international teams from 10 countries vying for 17 individual and team awards.

Culinaire Malaysia is jointly organised by the Malaysian Association of Hotels (MAH), Chefs Association of Malaysia and Malaysian Food & Beverage Executive Association, and endorsed by the World Association of Cooks Societies and Ministry of Tourism & Culture Malaysia.

MAH vice president, Shaheen Shah, said: “It has always been our hope to encourage and upgrade the culinary standards of Malaysia and at the same time provide an opportunity for Malaysian and international chefs to showcase their global flavour.”

MAH will also be organising and hosting the ASEAN Hotel & Restaurant Association Conference on September 19. President of AHRA, Surapong Techaruvichit, will deliver the keynote address.

Janet Hamilton now helms Darwin Convention Centre

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AEG Ogden has appointed Janet Hamilton general manager of the Darwin Convention Centre.

Hamilton replaces Malu Barrios who was recently appointed general manager of the Sydney Exhibition Centre at Glebe Island, a facility that is also managed by AEG Ogden.

Hamilton joins the Darwin venue from Energy Resources of Australia, where she was manager of external relations for four years.

Prior to moving to the Northern Territory, Hamilton had extensive major event and project management experience with the Sydney Olympic Organising Committee, the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority and Melbourne’s Docklands precinct.

In 2008, she was key project manager for the National Australia Banks’ 150th anniversary project, delivering a 12-month national programme of events and marketing initiatives.

Dusit Thani Bangkok dangles deal for corporate warriors

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AN EXCLUSIVE package for business travellers is now on offer at Dusit Thani Bangkok until October 31.

Priced from 4,500 baht (US$140) per room night, the package includes complimentary one-way transportation to or from the airport, late check-out until 16.00 and a range of other benefits.

The 517-room hotel is conveniently located in Bangkok’s business district, mere steps from train stations. Its club rooms and executive suites are designed for business travellers, while its Dusit Club Lounge includes a business centre and boardroom.

Contact dtbkrsvn@dusit.com for reservations.

Rewards, add-ons for meetings at Sheraton Hong Kong

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BUSINESS event planners who book their functions at Sheraton Hong Kong Hotel & Towers before the end of this year will enjoy several perks.

The hotel’s Work Now & Stay Later promotion offers event organisers five per cent off room rates on master account and a free night for every 50 room nights per booking. Organsiers can also choose two value-adds from a list that includes double Starpoints, Internet access in guest rooms and double complimentary upgrades. Starwood Preferred Planners and Starwood Gold and Platinum Planners will also earn a Starpoint for every US$3 and US$2 spent, respectively, and a room night credit towards elite status for every 10 group room nights consumed.

To qualify, events must be held by March 31, 2014.

A second promotion, Earn Reward of Your Choice, entitles meeting planners to two value-adds. Options include a complimentary LCD projector, welcome reception or an additional coffee break and a lunch upgrade.

Events that are booked and held by December 31 this year will earn an additional perk.

Terms and conditions apply. Contact karina.ting@sheraton.com or (852) 2732-6706 for more information.

Jetstar Asia hikes frequencies to Cambodia, Indonesia, China

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SINGAPORE-BASED LCC Jetstar Asia has announced a slew of increments to flight frequencies for a total of 18 more flights or 17,200 additional seats effective from the start of the northern winter operating season.

For flights out of Singapore beginning October 27, Jetstar Asia will add two more weekly Bali flights to make it a daily service while breaking up its Singapore-Siem Reap-Phnom Penh flights for daily direct service to Phnom Penh and thrice-weekly Siem Reap flights.

The LCC will pump up the Jakarta and Medan routes with four more weekly flights each for 25 and 10 weekly runs respectively.

One more Shantou flight will be added to up the frequency to four flights weekly, while from November 18 onwards, Hangzhou will also receive one more weekly flight for a five-times-weekly service.

Bara Pasupathi, CEO, Jetstar Asia, said the capacity upgrade was the result of the carrier’s acquisition of two new Sharket-equipped Airbus A320s to its fleet.

“Our focus on expanding our South-east Asia network and schedule gives our customers as well as our codeshare and interline passengers, greater choice and access to some of Asia’s most exciting holiday destinations,” he said.

“I’m delighted that Bali and Phnom Penh will now have daily flights operating out of Singapore from the end of October…Previously, passengers travelling to Phnom Penh would need to transit in Siem Reap. With direct flights to Phnom Penh, there will be more seats available from Singapore and travellers will now be able to enjoy more time exploring the destination.”

Thailand launches pilot tourist court in Pattaya

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THAILAND’S first tourist court opens today in popular tourist destination Pattaya, where visitors will be able to lodge complaints and seek hasty resolutions for unfair services and security concerns.

According to Thai news agency The Nation, the court is expected to deal mostly with consumer protection cases while serious cases will be passed along to Thailand’s regular courts.

Tourists can register their grievances within the operating hours from 16.30 to 20.30. Officials conversant in foreign languages will also be present to render assistance.

Wirat Chinwinigkul, secretary general of the Judiciary, was quoted as saying that the tourist court would encourage parties to solve disputes through negotiation so that cases can be solved in a day instead of the usual six months taken in regular courts.

Pattaya’s tourist court will tackle the issue of speedboat services that has tarnished the country’s reputation, said the news report. It would also scrutinise the role of tourism operators in providing fair service.

Six more night courts are currently planned, with one each in Krabi, Samui, Chiang Mai, Phuket, and Bangkok’s Pathum Wan district in Silom and Dusit district in Khao San.

A rosier picture for Vietnam’s tourism, hotel sectors

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FOLLOWING a languid start at the beginning of the year, inbound arrivals to Vietnam have picked up pace from the second quarter.

Total international arrivals to Vietnam rose 7.9 per cent year-on-year and numbered close to 4.9 million in the first eight months of 2013, according to statistics from Vietnam National Administration of Tourism.

This is a marked contrast from the lacklustre performance in 1Q2013, which saw international arrivals decline 6.2 per cent year-on-year to 1.8 million.

Although not the biggest source market, Russia delivered the sharpest increase of 63.1 per cent in visitor numbers to hit 189,317 arrivals from January to August 2013.

Indonesia remains an emerging market for Vietnam with a consistent year-on-year climb of over 20 per cent this year – a likely positive effect of the inaugural Jakarta-Ho Chi Minh City flights launched by Vietnam Airlines late last year (TTG Asia e-Daily, December 14, 2012). For the first eight months of 2013, Vietnam welcomed 48,920 Indonesian arrivals, a 25.6 per cent year-on-year surge.

At the same time, the growth in arrivals to Vietnam has helped to ease the room boom across the country.

Based on statistics from STR Global, average occupancy rate of hotels in Vietnam grew 5.2 percentage points year-on-year to 63.9 per cent in the first seven months of the year. During the same period, ADR rose 3.2 per cent year-on-year to 2.7 million Vietnamese dong (US$128) and RevPAR increased 8.6 per cent to 1.7 million Vietnamese dong.

On the supply side, the Vietnamese capital is expected to see an addition of 1,300 rooms within this year, according to Savills, with the opening of the 86-key Hilton Garden Inn Hanoi earlier this year, plus the upcoming debuts of the 450-key JW Marriott Hotel Hanoi and the 359-key InterContinental Hanoi Landmark 72 in 2H2013.

Philtoa to debut tourism academy

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THE Philippine Tour Operators Association (Philtoa) will launch the Philtoa Tourism Academy this month so as to contribute towards the creation of trained workers for the hospitality and travel services industry.

Philtoa president, Cesar Cruz, said that the academy’s curriculum is still being developed but that it would offer entry-level courses to meet industry requirements in areas of hotel services such as housekeeping, F&B and front desk services. It would also eventually extend courses to cover travel services including passenger handling, community guiding, etc.

He shared: “We will inventory the requirements of the industry.”

Modules and courses at the academy will help train “graduating students who cannot find work because their skills are not compatible with the requirements of the industry”, said Cruz.

Local government units that have small tourism establishments and cannot afford to hire consultants or trainers for their entry-level workforce can also benefit from the academy’s non-regular courses.

The non-profit institution will be backed by accreditation from the Philippine’s Technical Education and Skills Development Authority. A 140m2 space in Philtoa’s Makati City office, currently under construction, is to play home to the facility.

Cruz observed that many Filipino tourism professionals were recruited to work abroad after being trained and gaining experience locally.

“Our worry is that with the free flow of tourism professionals in ASEAN when regional integration takes place in 2015, more Filipino professionals will work in neighbouring countries (rather than remaining in the country). What will happen to travel agencies? We will lose a lot of good people.”

Knack Marketing appointed STB’s South India rep

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SINGAPORE Tourism Board (STB) has named Knack Marketing the NTO’s marketing representative in South India.

The travel specialist took over STB’s operations in Chennai and Bengaluru from September 1 and has been charged with further developing STB’s relationships with leisure and MICE travel trade partners in the area.

Chee Pey Chang, executive director, South Asia Middle East and Africa, STB, said: “South India is a major source market for leisure, MICE, overseas school trips and cruise travel to Singapore. STB has been very active in the market for more than a decade now and will continue to work closely with our partners to bring travellers to Singapore.”

Hilton Sukhumvit Bangkok takes aim at regional travellers

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HILTON Hotels & Resorts launched its ninth property in Thailand yesterday when Hilton Sukhumvit Bangkok officially opened its doors.

The 280-room five-star property located in downtown Bangkok will target business and leisure travellers from within the region, especially Hong Kong, Singapore, China, Malaysia and South Korea.

General manager Chris Ehmann said he is focusing on the hotel’s F&B outlets – Scalini, an 1920s-style Italian-American restaurant and Mondo, which serves Mediterranean and Asian tapas – to build the hotel’s reputation within Bangkok.

“I really want people to say they’re going to Scalini, rather than just telling friends they’re eating at the Hilton,” he said. “We have something unique with both restaurants. They have strong identities, excellent food and they’re quite informal. So we’ll really be focusing on building their exposure to drive business.”

Ehmann said leveraging the strong identity of the property, which features a 1920s to 1930s US Prohibition-era aesthetic throughout its restaurants, bars, public areas and meetings spaces, would be key in making it stand out in the city’s increasingly competitive market.

The property is designed to maximise the use of natural light, especially at the Summit meeting facilities on the 25th floor. Given its relatively limited space, the hotel will be targeting executive-level groups for its MICE business, said Ehmann.

“We’re looking at small-to-medium size groups for MICE,” he said. “The boardroom at The Summit can fit 14 people, so it’s ideal for quarterly meetings. The other two rooms are larger and can hold 20 to 50 people. We’re promoting The Summit as a destination rather than a meeting room. In life most business is conducted outside of a meeting room, which is why we have the kitchen and study as less formal breakout spaces.”

The hotel has seven meeting spaces of which the 250-pax ballroom is the largest.