Guidelines for tourism businesses unveiled
The Ministry of Tourism has announced new safety guidelines and codes of conduct for tourism businesses to prevent the spread of Covid-19 and revive the sector.
The ministry will now require tourism businesses to be trained in Covid-19 response techniques.
The new guidelines also layout additional conditions for all tourism businesses that plan on renewing their business licenses. Failures to do so will result in an immediate suspension of their license.
The ministry is also requiring all staff working in tourism businesses to be trained in the Tourism Capacity Building Programme in Response to Covid-19.
The training will be provided online and require advance registration. At the end of the training, a test will be given to evaluate the employees’ knowledge.
Minister Thong Khon said the training shall be held to coincide with the re-emergence of domestic and international travel and the gradual reopening of tourism businesses.
He said tourism services had closed primarily due to peoples’ fear of Covid-19.
The new rules and training program are meant to extinguish these fears by ensuring tourism employees have the knowledge and capacity to prevent the spread of the virus.
Khong said last month, around 600,000 local and foreign tourists had traveled within the country.
He said some private companies had already implemented measures to prevent the spread of the virus in cooperation with the Ministry of Health, but others still had to conform to the new guidelines.
He said the new rules will be published within 20 days and businesses will have 20 days from the publication date to implement them before the ministry starts conducting reviews.
“If they still don’t implement [after being warned], we will suspend their license for a while and let them adjust. After they have adjusted, we will give their license back,” he said.
He said tourism businesses such as hotels, guesthouses, resorts, and tourism transportation providers which implement the measures will receive a certificate to be displayed for visitors.
Cambodia Association of Travel Agents president Chay Sivlin welcomed the new measures. She expects them to instill confidence in tourists and promote tourism businesses as they try to recover from a pandemic-induced slump.
Suy Veth, the project director of tourism at Discova, a travel agency in Siem Reap province, said the tourism industry there had been seriously affected by Covid-19.
He said the focus on hygiene and other safety measures will prevent Covid-19 and other diseases.
Veth said if the Kingdom’s tourism businesses can effectively implement the guidelines, international tourists will realize that traveling to Cambodia poses a low risk of catching Covid-19. Phnom Penh Post