Destination: Asia

This Week in Tibet: Bad News, Good News?

This Week in Tibet: Bad News, Good News? Photo by mckaysavage via Flickr (Creative Commons).

News out of Tibet this week has been bleak. Thousands of Chinese troops descended on the plateau in anticipation of protests marking the 50th anniversary of the Dalai Lama’s exile; the Dalai Lama charged the Chinese government with making Tibet a “hell on earth,” and foreign tourists have been banned from the area. Since Tibetan protests erupted in March 2008, tourism in the region has suffered a steep drop and doesn’t look to recover anytime soon.

Until political tensions ease, we’ll have to make do with this small piece of good news: China just announced new restrictions on construction and advertising near Lhasa’s Potala Palace in an apparent attempt to preserve the complex, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. UNESCO has criticized the growing number of shops and restaurants near the palace in recent years, many built to cater to domestic Chinese tourists. 

So, why the announcement this week? China’s official news agency—in reply to the Dalai Lama—asserted that Tibet is in fact a “paradise on earth,” and paradise needs protecting, right?


Ayutthaya, Thailand

Elephants Thailand REUTERS/Sukree Sukplang

Elephants chow down at Ayutthaya Elephant Palace & Royal Kraal during Thailand's National Elephant Day.

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Morning Links: Japan’s ‘Ambassadors of Cute,’ Obama’s Position on Travel and More

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Tiananmen Square, China

Tiananmen Square, China REUTERS/Reinhard Krause

Hostesses pose for pictures on Tiananmen Square during the closing ceremony of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) in Beijing.

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What Fatwa? Bali’s Yoga Tourists Follow Their Bliss.

Hundreds of yoga tourists in Bali have now joined author Salman Rushdie in an exclusive club: those who have defied a fatwa. This week’s International Bali-India Yoga Festival—which drew participants from the U.S., Germany, Sweden and Japan—proceeded as planned despite a recent edict by Indonesia’s Ulema Council banning the practice of yoga for all Indonesian Muslims.

The New York Times reports that festival organizers initially conceived the event to boost spiritual tourism on the island and decided to go forward with it as a public show of force against the fatwa. Bali’s governor, no doubt aware of the island’s growing yoga tourism potential, has said he will not enforce the ruling.

Who knew sun salutations could be this fraught?


Xining, China

Xining, China REUTERS/David Gray

A Tibetan monk walks to pray in a temple as snow falls in the Kumbun Monastery located on the outskirts of Xining in Qinghai province.

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Morning Links: The Cuba Travel Showdown, Pirates and More

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Hollywood Heads to Bollywood

Hollywood Heads to Bollywood Photo by Meanest Indian via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Turns out, it really is a small world after all. Kylie Minogue has wrapped up filming for an upcoming Bollywood flick, “Blue,” making her one of the first big-name Western stars to land on a Mumbai sound stage. “I don’t feel that I’m necessarily at the forefront of a Hollywood-Bollywood crossover because I don’t consider myself Hollywood,” Minogue told the Telegraph. “But I do think this could be the start of something. The fact that I’m here shows it could be the start of something.”

Early signs suggest she’s right—Sylvester Stallone is set to do the Bollywood thing later this year. And—rumor has it!—Arnold Schwarzenegger will be joining him. Could the Bolly/Hollywood fusion become another wonder of our shrinking planet?

I’m all for it.


Morning Links: Bowie’s Clown Suit, Cute Penguin Overload and More

 


Shanghai Barbie: Tourist Magnet?

Shanghai Barbie: Tourist Magnet? Photo by Gary Soup via Flickr (Creative Commons).
Photo by Gary Soup via Flickr (Creative Commons).

Every time I visit Chicago, I’m amazed at how the city’s American Girl flagship store continues to draw moms and daughters from across the Midwest; I never fail to see them marching up Michigan Avenue, giant American Girl shopping bags in hand. Hotels in the area have lapped up the phenomenon, offering packages with kitschy extras like “one exclusive American Girl bed for your little doll to keep for future slumber parties” and a “free in-room movie showing of Molly: An American Girl on the Home Front.” Apart from the boost to tourism, the trend is a masterful case study in 360-degree branding.

Now I’m wondering if Shanghai is courting a similar fate with last Saturday’s opening of China’s first Barbie flagship store. The store, which includes 900 different kinds of Barbie dolls, a spa, a bar and a line of Barbie-themed clothing for adults, could well become a tourist mecca for Chinese girls and their mothers, who weren’t able to get their hands on the doll in their (pre-economic boom) childhood years.  If the store is a success—and I have a sneaking feeling it will be—we’ll see how long it takes nearby hotels, vendors and restaurants to co-opt a little Barbie magic. The gravity-defying doll hasn’t survived 50 years for nothing, after all.

For full Shanghai Barbie immersion, check out this Yahoo slideshow of the mega-store. It’s certainly in keeping with the brand’s image: six storeys, all glowing pink.


Rajasthan Gets Zipped

Move over Costa Rica, India is onto your game. The Neemrana Fort Palace hotel in Rajasthan now offers the country’s first zip line tour, which allows tourists to zip to five platforms and listen to local guides expound on the history of the forts and palaces below.

I suppose it’s a new twist on a long-running tourist money-spinner, though I doubt the history lectures are the main draw. More important, is the concept appropriate to the setting? This Guardian reviewer, who found the experience “fresh,” claims the environmental impact is minimal. It’s one thing to zip through jungles looking for howler monkeys; in this case, I think I’d prefer to explore the area by foot.


Uttar Pradesh, India

holi festival REUTERS/K. K. Arora

People celebrate the Hindu festival of Holi (festival of colors) at Nand Gaon in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.

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Morning Links: A Surge in Train Travel (Stories), the Truck Stop Dentist and More

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Hope for Clean-Energy Road Trips (Neil Young soundtrack included)

Photo by enygmatic via Flickr (Creative Commons).

I had to cheer when I read about the members of the Indian Youth Climate Network driving across 3,500 kilometers of the subcontinent in three electric Revas, a plant-oil-fueled truck, a van run on vegetable oil and another van with solar panels. They passed 15 major Indian cities to promote climate change awareness, while also advertising the effectiveness of clean-energy road-tripping. Hurray!

Momentum is definitely with them, and so is Neil Young, a master of great road songs who is transforming his 1959 Lincoln from a gas-guzzler into an electric vehicle. He’s even written a soundtrack for his electric-car project, which could inspire some clean-energy road-tripping on this continent. (Via Inhabitat)

 


Wuhan, China

wuhan china REUTERS/Stringer

Laundry hangs outside a student dormitory at a college in Wuhan, Hubei province.

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Tags: Asia, China