2006年VOA标准英语-Tourism Industry Begins Rebuilding in Indi(在线收听) |
By Patricia Nunan
In recent years that's begun to change. Now, officials say, more and more tourists are taking advantage of the two powers' push toward peace to reach a beguiling holiday destination. VOA's Patricia Nunan has more from Srinigar, in Indian-held Kashmir. ---------------------------------------------------------- Srinigar's Dal Lake - an oasis of tranquility on a weekend afternoon. It's long been a spot popular with Kashmiris, who ply the lake's waters in traditional wooden boats. Now, increasing numbers, including foreign tourists, come to stay in some of the 1,200 houseboats moored here - charming reminders of India's colonial past. Officials say that between 2003 and 2005, the number of tourists coming to the Kashmir Valley has nearly tripled - and is expected to reach more than a million in 2006. The houseboats, Tuman says, are a large part of the appeal. "You live in concrete blocks - back home, in the hotels and everywhere. You do not get, you know, the freshness and fragrance of cedarwood. And then you know, living in a houseboat is equal to living in a bird sanctuary. And you are living away from hustle and bustleand the soaking smell of cement. That's why houseboats are very, very popular." But they haven't been as popular as they could be. For the past 17 years, India has fought an Islamic insurgency in the two-thirds of Kashmir it controls. Militants want independence for Kashmir, or for it to merge with Pakistan, which controls Kashmir's remaining third. The militants have carried out terrorist attacks in the heart of Srinigar. And that's not all. Since British colonial rulers left the sub-continent in 1947, India and Pakistan have gone to war over Kashmir twice, and came close to a third time in 2002. Each of the nuclear-armed rivals wants full ownership of Kashmir, and each has forged its national identity in part, by decades of resistance to the other.
Recently, India and Pakistan have agreed to a series of measures to ease tensions between them, as a step towards an eventual resolution of the Kashmir conflict. Right now, Kashmir remains largely a hidden treasure. But perhaps not for long. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/5/32478.html |