Follow Us on Google News
JHELUM: Prime Minister Imran Khan said the government would develop the first-ever “tourist map” to attract local and foreign tourists as the country had enormous potential with diversity of mountains, coastlines, historic and cultural sites as well as religious places.
“When compared with Turkey and Malaysia, which earn $40 billion, $20 billion per annum from tourism, Pakistan despite having numerous tourist sites earns nothing,” Imran Khan, said while talking to media-persons at Nandana Fort (Baghan Wala Village) where he inaugurated the heritage trail.
The prime minister said that he wanted to develop and protect this area of historic significance – which he had visited some 25 to 30 years back – as a tourist site for the benefit of local people and the country.
Highlighting the historic importance of the area, he said that Abu Rehan Al-Beruni stayed at Nandana Fort, which used to be a large international university, for the quantification of the earth’s circumference for the first time in the 11th century.
PM Imran Khan said the government would develop Baghan Wala as a modern village, protect its heritage, help establish tourist facilities such as hotels and restaurants and bring the areas to the world tourism map.
To a question, he said that with Turkey attracting tourists due to 2000 years old history of Istanbul and Malaysia attracting tourists due to coastline, Pakistan also had the oldest cities like Peshawar, Lahore, and Shahpur of Mughal era.
He added that tourists would only come when the tourist sites were developed along with the required facilities. He further said that the promotion of tourism will not only bring in foreign exchange to the country but will also create employment opportunities.
PM Imran Khan said that besides mountain tourism which attracted the local and foreign tourists interested in skiing and trekking, Pakistan also had famous historical sites like Mohenjo Daro, Harappa and Gandhara civilizations and religious sites for Buddhists, Sikhs and Hindus.
Similarly, he said, with the shrines of various Sufi saints including Baba Farid, Data Ganj Bakhsh, Bulleh Shah, Pakistan also offered religious and sufism tourism for Muslims across the world.
The prime minister said that despite insufficient facilities, domestic tourism was also on the rise in Pakistan as a large number of people from across the country visit the mountainous areas.