TravelWeekly homepage
 
 
 
SUBSCRIBE
E-daily
POLL
Will the proposed cash injections to the ailing economies turn things around ?
Yes
No
View results
 
INDUSTRY NEWS

Airlines

China

Corporate Travel

Cruises

Destination

GDS

Hotels

MICE

Online Travel

Travel Agents

Press Release
 
Archives
 
Guest Column
 
NETWORK
TravelWeekly China
TravelWeekly UK
TravelWeekly Australia
EVENTS
Reed Business Information Asia
Reed Elsevier Group
Reed Exhibitions
RX China
Reed Travel Exhibitions







 
Free Print Subscription free print subscription
Printer Friendly version print-friendly version
Email to a Friend email this story to a friend

Vietnam to become key destination for Japanese tourists

Breaking news, 17 Dec 2008

HO CHI MINH CITY – Vietnam will be one of the key tourism destinations to be listed in Japan’s tourism promotion programme in the near future, according to the Japanese Association of Travel Agents.

According to a VNA report, although Japan and Vietnam are struggling in the face of the global economic downturn, 400,000 Japanese tourists have visited Vietnam so far this year.

Vietnam Airlines’ vice representative to Japan, Kieu Anh, said the carrier has so far this year earned around US$200 million from transporting Japanese tourists and goods from Japan to Vietnam.

Japan is currently the biggest market for Vietnam Airlines, which expects to welcome 440,000 Japanese passengers next year and 600,000 in the next three years.

The carrier has focused its efforts on boosting cooperation with Japanese travel agents and relevant agencies to hold cultural and tourism events to attract Japanese tourists to Vietnam.

The carrier now provides six direct flights from Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City to Japan’s four major cities, namely Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka and Fukuoka.

 
Free Print Subscription free print subscription
Printer Friendly version print-friendly version
Email to a Friend email this story to a friend
 
Other News

China to launch first direct flight to Tibet

NATAS: Singapore remains a safe destination

Thailand seeks marketing bright spots in bleak global tourism environment

Japan declares safe travel

Philippine tourism unfazed by A (H1N1) situation

May AAPA results still show deteriorating market conditions

Indonesia worried Australians bringing H1N1 to Bali

Boeing postpones Dreamliner’s first flight

JAL to receive government help

Passengers, crew member hurt in Qantas in-flight incident

View More News >
 
 
Related Articles

Alarm bells as airlines, travel companies collapse

MATTA to push for All-Inclusive Pricing

SAS fine-tunes SEA strategy

Tiger good at “bluster”, accuses Jetstar chief

Now everyone’s feeling the pain

Flying through the perfect storm

Asian airlines adjust plans as fuel prices soar

Air Astana eyes new growth in Asia

Oasis: Crunched by credit and fuel

Branded Fares are fair for all

 
 
 
 
©2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this web site is subject to its Terms and Conditions of Use. View our Privacy Policy.