The last 80 or so river dolphins in the Mekong River are at the heart of an ambitious development programme to tackle poverty and attract
tens of thousands of visitors to two of the poorest provinces of Cambodia.
The Mekong River Discovery Trail Project will draw visitors to view the endangered fresh water dolphin which lives in 10 deep water natural
pools in a 190-km stretch of the Mekong River, mostly between the quiet provincial capitals of Kratie and Stung
Treng.
The main objective of the Discovery Trail is poverty alleviation. About 50% of all households in Stung Treng and 30% of those in Kratie live
on less than US$1 a day. “The Mekong River Discovery Trail Project aims to bring about sustainable pro-poor tourism that helps develop
Northeast Cambodia,” said Dr Harsh Varma, Director of Development Assistance Department of the World Tourism Organization.
While Cambodia’s tourism arrival statistics show growth in excess of 20% a year, it is not equitably distributed,
said Ms Anne-Maria
Makela, Senior Tourism Advisor for SNV Netherlands Development Organisation. “Too much of it goes to Angkor and Siem Reap. We want to bring
more communities into the tourism picture, either as employees or as suppliers to the tourism industry.”
In addition to 80,000 domestic tourists, the Cambodian government says that about 10,800 international visitors, mostly backpackers, visited
Kratie in 2006, 35% up on the previous year. It estimates that 4,000 visited Stung Treng, an increase of 20%. Nearly all stayed in guest
houses for less than US$5 a night and took motos, bicycles, motorbikes and longtail boats to see the dolphins, which must break surface
every few minutes for air.
By seeking out the dolphins, backpackers have indicated the potential to the Cambodian Ministry of Tourism, which is now mobilising
money and expertise from SNV and the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO).
A study conducted jointly by SNV and the International Finance Corporation found that only 12% of the US$3.12 million dollars spent by
tourists in Kratie in 2006 returned to people from a poor or near poor background. However, SNV says that when tourism spreads its roots
this figure is likely to expand to around 30%. The survey showed that 80% of people working in the accommodation and restaurants in
Kratie came from very poor families.
As part of the project to attract tourists to the Mekong, villagers near the pools will be encouraged to diversify economic activity away from
fishing. Local authorities believe fishing is depleting the dolphins’ food supply. Fishermen will be encouraged to take visitors to see the
dolphins and sell food and drinks instead.
“No dolphins means no tourism. No tourism means no development,”
said Dr Thong Khon, Cambodia’s Minister of Tourism. “Our challenge
is to secure the long-term viable future of local communities and the river dolphin. Our priority is to build community awareness as well as
hotels, guest houses and a boat jetty in Kratie to encourage more visitors.”
Phase I of the project, the Tourism Development Master Plan for Kratie town, was completed in September 2007. Phase II, the design and
development of the Mekong River Discovery Trail, community based tourism and training, will start
this month.
The project will only directly help selected villages along the route. However, the UNWTO believes “backward linkages” such as tourism
demand for agricultural produce will indirectly help hundreds more.
Access and infrastructure in Kratie and Stung Treng are problematic. There is no international standard hotel. There is no local airport. The
nearest is in Phnom Penh, a five-hour road trip or a six-hour congested public boat trip away.
Nevertheless, budget travellers and a few tour groups have already ‘discovered’ Kratie, which still has some architecture and ambience from
the French colonial period. Visitors to Kratie and Stung Treng praise the simple pleasures of travelling in country lanes near the river. There
are enjoyable chance encounters with monks, school children and villagers in riverside huts selling snacks and toddy palm drinks. Apart
from seeing the dolphins, gathering by the Mekong to watch the sun go down across the river is part of Kratie’s simple appeal.
The few tour groups that do visit Kratie tend to only spend an hour or so viewing the dolphins, a nearby temple and a rubber plantation. The
groups then continue on to the mountains and hilltribe attractions of Rattanakiri province before returning to Phnom Penh or Siem Reap,
where the Angkor ruins are.
“Kratie has potential,” says Mr Luzi Matzig, Group CEO of Bangkok-based tour operator Asian Trails. “But there needs to be a lot more
investment in three-star accommodation, restaurants and riverine attractions before it becomes a significant destination.
“What I do like about the place is the charm and friendliness of the people and the feeling that you’re part of an authentic Khmer
experience.”
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