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Good News for Phuket
Bangkok Post
29 January 2005
Chinatown festival to draw 200,000
NONDHANADA INTARAKOMALYASUT
The annual festival in Bangkok's Chinatown to celebrate the Chinese New Year is expected to attract at least 200,000 visitors to the area and generate 400 million baht in revenue.
Most of the visitors to the Chinatown Festival 2005, to take place from Feb 9-10, will come from China, Hong Kong and Singapore.
Despite the setback in the tourism industry following the tsunami in southern Thailand, the festival this year is likely to attract at least the same number of visitors as last year as it marks the 50th birthday of Her Royal Highness Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn and the 30th anniversary of Chinese-Thai diplomatic relations, according to Santichai Euachongprasit, the deputy governor for marketing, Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT).
The celebration, which is co-organised by the TAT, Bangkok Metropolitan Administration and the Samphanthawong District Community, will be held on a grander scale than in the past. It will feature four stages for spectacular shows performed by local artists and more than 170 performers from China.
The TAT will pay about half of the 15-million-baht organising cost with private sponsors handling the rest..
Visitors to the festival will be able to enter a a draw for prizes including a car, airline tickets and mobile phones.
After the festival, on Feb 11-12, the Chinese performers will go to Phuket.
Mr Santichai said China Central Television (CCTV) would broadcast the show in China, a move that would help reassure tourists about the safety and security of the southern Andaman coast as part of the TAT's marketing plan to rebuild tourists' confidence.
Sonthaya Khunpluem, the Tourism and Sports minister said that during the Chinese New Year, some 1.28 million local and foreign tourists are expected to travel within Thailand, an increase from 1.2 million in the same period last year.
In January, the number of overseas visitors fell by 17% compared to the same period last year. The figure is projected to increase by 7-8% in February, helped by foreign visitors coming to Thailand to celebrate Chinese New Year.
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