Vietnam - an attractive destination for Japanese tourists

During the last 10 years, a growing number of Japanese tourists have been coming to Vietnam. Last year, for example, Vietnam welcomed about 400,000 Japanese travelers. The Japan Association of Travel Agents (JATA) said that about 16.5 million Japanese people go abroad each year and nearly 400,000 of these people visit Vietnam. Experts say that Vietnam has the potential to attract even more tourists from Japan.

The Japan Tourism Marketing Company did a survey which showed that Japanese tourists go to Vietnam to enjoy Vietnamese food, shop and learn how Vietnamese people live and about Vietnamese culture in general.

Apart from the special kinds of food such as spring rolls (nem) and noodle soup (pho), and the various handicrafts, there are many other interesting things for Japanese tourists to discover.

The survey showed that 88 percent of Japanese tourists said that they come here to enjoy the Vietnamese food, 82 percent wanted to go shopping, 59 percent wanted to visit historical sites, 40 percent came to visit museums, 35 percent were looking for nature, 31 percent wanted to enjoymassage, and 23 percent wanted to relax at a seaside resort.

Seventy-two percent of Japanese tourists going to Vietnam went to Ho Chi Minh City, 48 percent to Hanoi, 26 percent to Ha Long Bay, 26 percent to My Tho, 19 percent to Hue, 17 percent to Hoi An and 16 percent to Nha Trang.

Compared to Thailand, however, Vietnamese tourism advertising is weak. Other weaknesses are the unqualified and unskilled Vietnamese tour guides, a lack of cooperation between tourism businesses and airlines and the lack of coordination between different localities in tourism promotion.

In 2008, the Japanese travel companies JTB and APEC cooperated with Japan Airlines (JAL) and Vietnam Airlines to organize hundreds of workshops presenting tourism destinations in Vietnam, along with tourism and airline trade fairs in Japan.

In September 2009, the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT), Vietnam Airlines and the city of Da Nang launched a 'Vietnam Show 2009' advertising campaign to popularize Vietnamese tourism in Japan. This program was kicked-off in the city of Sakai in Osaka province (where the Vietnamese Consulate General is based) with music, dance and fashion shows. 'Vietnam Show 2009' is one of the biggest advertising programs presenting Vietnamese tourism in Japan. This event presents the image of Vietnam and therefore it is hoped to attract more Japanese tourists to Vietnam. Under this program, there will also be tourism workshops with the participation of Vietnamese and Japanese travel companies.

In September 2009, JATA did a survey of the Vietnamese tourism in the framework of the "Visit World Campaign" launched by this association.

The vice chairman of JATA, Takashi Sasari, said that when he came to Vietnam at this time he could feel the rapidity of development in Vietnam as well as its great potential in terms of tourism. The Japanese tourism sector highly appreciates the efforts of the Vietnamese Government, especially the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, to establish a bilateral cooperative relationship in the field of tourism. It is hoped that the number of Japanese tourists going to Vietnam will increase. The number of Japanese tourists to Vietnam could reach 600,000 per year, Mr. Sasari said.

Hanoi through a Saigonese’s lens

Photographer Nguyen The Duong has just finalised the first stage of a project named “I Love Hanoi”.

In the eyes of a Saigonese man, Hanoi looks different.


Hoan Kiem Lake

The The Huc Bridge in Hanoi’s center


The “legendary” Dong Xuan market

Part of the ceramic road

A new residential area

Kaengnam – Vietnam’s highest building

The West Lake

Hanoi at night

The Hanoi Opera House

Dong Kinh Nghia Thuc Square

Hanoi at 11.45 pm

Hanoi – the city of future

The National Convention Center

Hanoi at night

The best roundabout in Hanoi: Tran Duy Hung – Pham Hung

Thang Long Avenue


Kim Lien tunnel

Hanoi during Vesak holiday

Many pagodas in the capital city have been decorated with flags, flowers, and banners to celebrate Lord Buddha’s Birthday.

Thousands of monks, nuns and Buddhist followers attended a grand ceremony for the 2011 Vesak festival and the 2,555th Buddhist Year held in Hanoi on May 17.

The festival started at the Hanoi Cultural Palace, with the pomp of rituals and processions from Quan Su Pagoda.

Thousand-year-old pagoda in northern village

Hai Phong City is home to a historic thousand-year-old pagoda in the village of Tra Phuong of the Thuy Huong Commune in Kien Thuy District, built during the Ly Dynasty in the beginning of the 11th century.

The pagoda's gateway

According to monk Thich Quang Man, the pagoda was initially known as Ba Danh. The most ancient vestiges of the Ba Danh pagoda are three pillar bases that are made of stones with skillfully carved lotuses. Each of the pillar bases weigh several tons.

The pagoda was located north of Tra Phuong Village on six hectares of land on an isolated hillock full of lush green trees, three kilometers from the Che Mountain.

In the 16th century, the Ba Danh pagoda was rebuilt and renamed Thien Phuc Tu, when Mac Dang Dung was enthroned in 1527. Legend has it that the pagoda once protected Mac Dang Dung when his enemies had tried to kill him.

Queen Vu Thi Ngoc Toan who was from the Tra Phuong Village also contributed to the restoration of the pagoda.

According to epitaphs in the pagoda, the new pagoda was built 200 km from the old one, which is Thuy Huong High School now.

The new pagoda became a Buddhist centre and a famous landmark in the region at that time. Today it stands in present day Hai Duong Province and Haiphong City.

When the Mac Dynasty collapsed, Le - Trinh mandarins and soldiers destroyed many of the architectural works built by the Mac Dynasty including the Tra Phuong Pagoda.

Until early 20th century, a woman named Ngo Thi Dinh from Hai Phong donated towards rebuilding the pagoda, as it exists until now.

In 2007, the Ministry of Culture and Information recognized the Tra Phuong pagoda as a national cultural architectural monument.

The present pagoda is shaped like 丁, a hand script, and comprises of five forecourts and three harem spaces with skillfully carved wooden pillars.

On the Buddhist temple, there are hundred of statues of Buddhists and avatars and two stone statues of King Mac Dang Dung and Queen Vu Thi Ngoc Toan, which researchers say are very rare and beautiful sculpture works remaining from the Mac Dynasty.

After burning incense in the Buddhist temple, visitors should not forget to visit the epitaph house where there are stone steles written about the process of building and restoration of the pagoda from the Ly to Mac Dynasty and afterwards.

Under the shade of hundred-year-old trees in the pagoda yard, visitors will see two stone crocodiles in front of the corridor leading to the epitaph house. The stone crocodile statues date back to the 16th century.

Pristinely beautiful Ban Vat waterfall

Ban Vat Waterfall is known for its pristine natural beauty and as the historical home of the Thai ethnic minority of Muong Sang Commune in Moc Chau District of the northwestern province of Son La.

The spectacular Ban Vat Waterfall in the northwestern province of Son La

Ban Vat Waterfall is located north of Hanoi across many mountain passes covered with fog, near the road leading to Son La town.

The Kinh ethnic group calls the waterfall Dai Yem (an ancient Vietnamese undergarment) or Nang (She). These names signify that the waterfall is so beautiful that it resembles the beauty of a 16-year-old girl.

Local residents call the waterfall Thai Hung or Ban Vat, meaning the home of the Thai ethnic minority.

Amidst green forests, chirping birds and gibbon calls, the 100-meter high waterfall gushes down day and night.

The Ban Vat Waterfall flows from the two rivulets of Bo Co Lam and Bo Ta Chau, originating from a cave in Vat mountain village that has long been the home of the Thai ethnic minority.

Water seeps out of the limestone mountain to create the Vat spring, which stretches for five kilometers before merging with Bo Sap spring in the Bo Sap mountain village on the borders of Laos, to transform eventually into the magnificent Ban Vat Waterfall.

The waterfall comprises of two levels of falls with the second one located 150 meters at an angle below the first one. Above the second waterfall is a floral stretch of land from where visitors can view the surrounding mountainous view.

The Ban Vat Waterfall looks most stunning during the rainy season from April to September every year, when the 70-metre wide fall gushes water down its slope, looking a dazzling white and imposingly dramatic and poetic.

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