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Travel Tales from India and Abroad
Travel Tales from India and Abroad

Right Noises about the Incredible India Campaign?

Posted on September 27, 2007

Langza- Spiti, Himachal Pradesh 

Finally I saw once sensible and balanced piece about Indian tourism and the Incredible India campaign. I mean who can quarrel with the concept, many parts of India are incredibly beautiful.

As CII and Ministry of Tourism celebrate ‘Incredible India@60’ in the Big Apple, leading global communication services player WPP’s Chief Executive Martin Sorrell said: “If people don’t live the brand promise… It’s dead. We can advertise a bad product (only) once.” India’s Tourism Ministry Joint Secretary Amitabh Kant agreed that branding was fine, but welcoming tourists with garbage and filth will ensure the initiative never takes off.In short, India requires its creaking infrastructure to be set right for the experience to change, experts felt. New Delhi has estimated that it needs USD 492 billion to revamp urban and rural infrastructure, including roads, ports, airports and power sector, besides water and sanitation.

View from a Train near Pathankot, India
I mean who can deny that this is India too. And a site more common than anyone of us would like to see.

6 thoughts on “Right Noises about the Incredible India Campaign?”

  1. Smita says:
    September 27, 2007 at 6:16 am

    It is beautiful yes, but sadly I won’t say very safe. Did u hear what happened to the Jap women in Agra? I toured most of Western Europe on my own sometimes at the wee hours of night – and have never felt unsafe. In India, I feel unsafe even in broad day light sometimes in cities like Delhi. Tourists get ripped off by guides, transportation in places are terrible…Attitudes need to chage – be it towards cleanliness, efficiency, honesty.

    Reply
  2. AmreekanDesi says:
    September 30, 2007 at 3:30 am

    I hate to admit this, but its true. We might package India to people to come visit, but it would take a brave soul to take a vacation to travel to India.Smita summarised it aptly – attitudes need to change. But then that’s a biggie…will take a while.

    Reply
  3. Mridula says:
    October 2, 2007 at 1:50 pm

    Smita, how I agree with you. Safety for women in India is a different altogether. Amreekandesi, welcome to my blog. India does have a tough destination image and I guess rightly so!

    Reply
  4. Sidhusaaheb says:
    October 6, 2007 at 2:03 pm

    I am reminded of the lyrics of a Michael Jackson song.”I’m Starting With The Man In The MirrorI’m Asking Him To Change His Ways…”:)

    Reply
  5. Sigma says:
    October 7, 2007 at 4:43 am

    I completely agree with both your points – there are so many places in our country that are incredibly beautiful. But we do not care about preserving the beauty. Garbage and filth are a common site not just in the populated parts, but any site that becomes a frequented destination is spoilt too. We dont have a waste management system, we are not even conscious about keeping our surroundings clean.

    Reply
  6. backpakker says:
    October 8, 2007 at 6:12 pm

    I completely agree with Smita ..when we went to europe recently, there was not a piece of paper flung on the road and here in India, unfortunately, educated people throw cigarettes, chips packets on roads and picnic spots ..also information is available everywhere , even a small town will have digital signboards telling you which train is arriving at which platform ..if such infrastructure and technology is available, one can avoid accidents like the one that happenned at Mughalsarai

    Reply

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About Me

I am Mridula Dwivedi and I started this blog in 2005. It has been an amazing ride. I have visited 33 countries till date! I have worked with many tourism boards and prominent travel companies. My blog was featured on the BBC and the Guardian.

I did my Ph.D. from IIT Kanpur. I worked full time in academics till 2015! I quit my job as a professor, thinking I will take a break for one year, which turned into five.

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