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Monday, February 6, 2012

Rajasthan sets eyes on more tourists from Gujarat, Organises tourism festival across cities in Gujarat

Mumbai/ Rajkot: In a bid to woo more tourists from Gujarat, the Rajasthan Tourism Department is organising three day tourism festival in Rajkot, with more such events planned in other cities like Ahmedabad, Surat and Vadodara."Gujaratis are very fond of to travel and very large numbers of Gujarati tourists come to Rajasthan. However, we still see huge untapped potential in the state and hence, to attract more people from here, Rajasthan tourism department has planned to organise 'Rajasthan Calling' festival in Gujarat," said Anand Tripathi, deputy director, Rajasthan Tourism.

Organised under Rajasthan Tourism domestic tourism promotion campaign 'Rajasthan Calling', the festival will also cover other parts of the country and will travel to 22 major cities including Kochi, Ludhiana, Dehradun, Surat, Coimbatore, Trivandrum, Mumbai, Kolkata and Ahmedabad.

The festival aims to give a feel of Rajasthan and facilitate a better understanding about the state and provide complete information and showcase Rajasthan's traditional culture and exquisite range of Rajasthani handicraft products and Rajasthani delicacies in the city, Amongst the major highlight of the festival are live dances and a food court.

"There are stalls put up during the festival where one can choose from handicrafts, woolen shawls from Bikaner, embroidery from Barmer, brass work and blue pottery from Jaipur, terracota from Udaipur and tie and dye from Jaipur, Pali and Jodhpur," said Tripathi.

According to Narayan Sharma, tourist officer, Rajasthan Tourism Department, more than 20.5 million domestic tourists had visited Rajasthan during 2010 and till August 2011 the state saw an influx of over 10.6 million tourists."Among the tourists that frequent Rajasthan, Gujarat tops the list followed by West Bengal and Maharashtra," said Sharma.

When asked about a potential brand ambassador for Rajasthan Tourism, Tripathi said, "Rajasthan is itself a brand and it does not need any brand ambassador for promotions. The tourism department is also marketing the state through social networking sites like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and blogs."

(sourced Business Standard)

Britain faces a month of weather chaos as snow wrecks travel plans

Monday 06 February 2012
Britain is facing a month of snow, ice and freezing temperatures after the first Big Freeze of the winter led to cancelled flights at Heathrow and treacherous conditions on the roads.

• Heathrow cancelled half of flights after it stopped snowing
• Coldest temperature overnight in Yorkshire at -8.6C (16.5F)
• Big Freeze could last until end of the month, says Met Office
• Police close 25 miles of A1 northbound in North Yorkshire

Forecasters have warned the biting temperatures, snow showers and overnight frosts could last until the end of February as the country returned to work amid expected school closures.

Parts of the UK woke up to lying snow of up to five inches (14cm) this morning while the coldest temperature of -8.6C (16.5F) was recorded overnight in Church Fenton in North Yorkshire.Heathrow Airport faced questions last night as to why half of all flights were cancelled hours after it stopped snowing.

BAA, the Spanish-owned airport operator, incurred the wrath of passengers after 600 flights were grounded at Heathrow despite just three inches of snowfall, disrupting the plans of as many as 18,000 travellers.
This morning, the airport was operating its normal flight schedule but warned of a backlog of cancellations.

The Met Office said the rest of the week would be cold for most parts of the country. "Most of England and Wales will be staying relatively settled but cold. The biggest risk is hard overnight frost and freezing fog," said Steven Keates, Met Office forecaster. "It looks as if this cold snap will last two or three weeks and this weather system looks as though it will erode from the west in the second half of February."

The disruption was in stark contrast to airports across Europe where, despite record low temperatures, flights took off as normal. In Germany, no airport had to shut even though Munich saw temperatures plunge to -27C. In Stockholm only six of 350 flights were cancelled. Copenhagen had four inches of snow but no disruption.

In contrast, by Saturday afternoon BAA had already cancelled a third of flights nine hours before any snow had fallen in a pre-emptive plan to avoid the chaos of previous winters.Yet even as the snow began to melt from 6am on Sunday and passengers reported clear runways, more than half of flights remained grounded.

It comes less than 14 months after the airport was crippled for five days because there were not enough snow clearance vehicles to keep runways open. Despite an inquiry and promises by BAA that it had increased its snowplough fleet by 68 to 185 at a cost of £32.4 million, the airport was only able to handle just one in two flights.

“It’s unbelievable. The runways seemed clear and they have cancelled the flights,” said Philippa Britton, of Kendal, Cumbria.Those flying in from Moscow voiced their disbelief that they were stranded, despite flying out from Russia in -20C snow storms. Miriam Walters, 62, a teacher, said: “The runways at Moscow were covered with snow and still we managed to leave.”

Although the bad weather caught airport operators unaware in 2010, The Met Office had predicted the weekend snowfall days in advance. Gatwick, Stansted and London Luton had no disruption as did Manchester, Prestwick and Edinburgh. The number of planes stuck on the tarmac at Heathrow meant incoming flights were forced to divert elsewhere.

Hundreds of passengers were last night stranded in Ireland as six flights were sent to Shannon Airport. British Airways was badly affected, with two thirds of its flights between 9.15am and 2.15pm cancelled. Stranded passengers said the airport refused to put them up in hotels, forcing them to sleep on yoga mats in terminals.

Elin Mabbutt, a mother of three from Aberystwyth, was due to fly to Mumbai on Saturday but her flight was cancelled. “It is frustrating especially as there is no sign of snow on the ground,” said Mrs Mabbutt, 33.
Lengthy delays meant many crew had exceeded their working hours and could not fly. In December 2010 4,000 flights were cancelled over a week as cold weather and snow hit Britain. The economy lost an estimated £1.2 billion a day, and BAA some £20 million.

A report by Prof David Begg, an independent adviser, criticised the lack of preparedness and equipment. Transport experts said Heathrow struggles because the airport is stretched to the limit.“Heathrow operates at full capacity all of the time so anytime there are adverse conditions, such as snow, some leeway has to be given, such as closing runways and parking stations,” said Mike Carrivick, the chief executive of the Board of Airlines, which promotes the business interests of airlines. He said a review would now be carried out to establish whether changes to procedures, introduced after the weather problems in 2010, had worked and if “things went right and what went wrong”.

A spokesman for London First, a business group that represents 200 major companies, said employers would be concerned how the airport would cope on Monday. "We think the important thing is how quickly things get back to normal," he said.

"Employers will be thinking 'yes it snowed over the weekend and we got through it' but they will ask how are is the airport going to cope today and will staff be able to travel and get into work." A spokesman for ABTA, the travel association, said: “The disruption once again raises the issue of capacity constraints at the busiest airports and highlights the need for a robust long term strategy for UK aviation.” A spokesman for the British Bankers Association, who was stranded in Edinburgh, said any disruptions were of concern.

“It makes it more difficult for people to do business in the UK,” she said. “Clearly safety comes first but our concern is always with the transport systems and (such) disruptions have on business life.” Boris Johnson, the London Mayor, has called for a new airport in the Thames, dubbed Boris Island. Plans for a third runway at Heathrow have been shelved.

BAA defended the way it had handled the weekend’s snow. Justine Greening, the Transport Secretary, said they had taken “the right approach”. She said: “The most important thing is making sure that we put safety first. BAA said on Sunday night that the airport was expected to be running at full capacity on Monday.

To read more about this article visit Telegraph.co.uk