Foreign tourist inflow into India has registered a significant drop of 25 per cent in the last three months of the year in the wake of rape incidents, according to a survey undertaken by Assocham Social Development Foundation (ASDF).
Nearly 72 per cent of the tour operators surveyed said several bookings had been cancelled, especially from foreign women tourists in the last three months, mainly from the UK, the US, Canada and Australia.
Assocham surveyed 1,200 tour operators from different cities. They attributed the drop in tourists to safety (in wake of recent incidents with foreign women), security problems and the global economic slowdown.
ASSOCHAM Secretary General D. S. Rawat said the industry has primarily been affected due to deteriorating standards of safety and security.
The survey highlights that from December 2012 onwards the inflow of women tourists into the country has gone down by 35 per cent and that overall tourism has been affected by 25 per cent.
Other Asian countries such as Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and Vietnam are the destinations of choice now.
Further aggravating the situation are advisories issued by various countries to their citizens to avoid visiting India and to be cautious if they visit.
(Hindu)