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Information
24-Aug-2005
Last Edited
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SIHANOUKVILLE, Cambodia :
With pristine beaches rivaling Asia's best holiday destinations, a
five-star hotel, a reopened airport and a planned golf course, Cambodia's
Sihanoukville is poised to jump into the global tourism arena.
Thousands of tourists are already lured to Cambodia by the ancient Angkor
Wat temple complex but few other sights attract their attention or their
desperately sought-after dollars.
Sniffing opportunity, the government and private investors are lining up to
position the southwestern port town of Sihanoukville as a tropical getaway,
competing with the likes of Thailand's Phuket and Indonesia's Bali.
"If we compare, the potential is better than Phuket because of the quality
of sand -- it's white -- and the water is clean. The offshore islands have
coral reefs, there's fishing," enthuses city tourism director Teng Huy.
A port town established in the 1950s -- it remains Cambodia's youngest city
-- Sihanoukville became a popular resort among the elite until the rise of
the Khmer Rouge, which embarked on a genocide that decimated the country.
It was re-discovered by backpackers in the 1990s and today retains a sleepy,
faded charm, with the occasional cow wandering through the streets and
ramshackle restaurants on many of its beaches.
The locally-owned Sokha Hotel has extended Sihanoukville's appeal beyond
backpackers to well-heeled travellers by opening its 15-hectare, 180-room
hotel in April, the first five-star operation here.
"The beach product is excellent, it's top class. Great sand, great sea,
that's a great start, we're out of the gate and running well," says general
manager Anthony O'Neill, a 12-year veteran of the Asian tourism industry.
More government help however is needed to rebuild the infrastructure
shattered from conflict that only ended in 1998, as well as better
attractions, to secure Sihanoukville's place on the international circuit,
O'Neill says.
A nine-hole golf course being developed by Malaysia's Ariston Holdings along
nearby Occheuteal beach is one such crucial drawcard, he says.
"The golf course concept has to be raced along... because if you can't get
core features you simply can't contain people in a holiday resort and even
think you're going to challenge your competitors in Asia," he says.
"I'm competing with Bali, Phuket, even Pattaya. It's these markets we keep
an eye on -- can we do it here?"
Sokha is just one of several hotels positioned to enter the market.
The quirky art deco Independence Hotel, which drew fashionable crowds in the
1960s prior to the 1975 rise of the Khmer Rouge, is due to open by
September, while a 120-room hotel is packaged with the golf course project.
Scheduled flights -- also seen as vital to Sihanoukville's rejuvenation --
are on the horizon with the reopening of its airport in April to chartered
flights. A runway extension is slated to be completed before year end,
making it a potential destination for regional airlines.
Martin Standbury, the project manager for the golf course due to open within
the coming year, says Sihanoukville may be sleepy for now, but its potential
is enormous.
"For now tourists get a bit bored. There's the beach, cheap beer, seafood --
they probably need a few more attractions," he says.
"I reckon there is huge potential here over the next three to five years,
not just for foreigners but the locals," he says, noting that Cambodia's
emerging middle class has begun holidaying here again.
Business owners -- many of them foreigners who were travelling through but
decided to stay, captivated by the landscape and laidback lifestyle -- say
they have noticed a steady increase in numbers.
"Despite the anti-Thai riots (in Phnom Penh in January 2003), SARS, (the
terror attacks in) America and the elections, my trade has increased in the
last year as has everybody elses," says hotel and bar owner Richard Blackley.
Teng Huy's office puts the number of tourists who visited last year at just
over 114,000, six percent less than 2002 due to the regional SARS outbreak,
but for the first three months this year the figure jumped by 29 percent on
2003.
Blackley, who moved here four years ago, says the town was once awash with
small arms -- like the rest of the country -- but has normalised and
authorities are making an effort to renovate the town.
"Infrastructure is being repaired, government buildings are being repaired,
you can see improvements with parks and gardens... And the race for land on
the beaches is phenomenal," he says.
"I'm extremely optimistic. Every day something new is being done."
Li Li, a Chinese technical worker on a hydropower plant in a nearby
province, comes here every few months with a half dozen colleagues who are
drawn by the seafood and scenery.
"Sihanoukville is very, very beautiful -- the water, the sky," he told AFP
after a beachside seafood feast.
"I think more and more people will come to Cambodia and here."
- AFP
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