Keeping tourists safe in Vietnam: Calls for foreigners’ police force

Journalism , Travel , Vietnam Mar 22, 2016 No Comments

Ho Chi Minh City authorities have again raised the prospect of establishing a tourism police force to make the burgeoning travel industry safer after a reported surge in street crimes.

Just last week, one person was killed and at least fifteen injured when a busload of Chinese tourists crashed into a truck on a mountain pass.

Last month, the deaths of three British backpackers at a waterfall grabbed international headlines.

Sisters Beth Anderson, 24, and Isobel Mackensie Squire, 19, and their friend Christian Sloan, 25, were killed at the Datanla waterfalls near Da Lat in the central highlands.

Their guide claimed he warned them against venturing towards the whirlpool that swept them to their deaths.
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But a director of the company that managed the site, Vo Anh Tan, has since said the guide was unauthorised and he had snuck the tourists in to avoid paying an entrance fee.

“The truth is adventure tour providers take human life lightly,” said the chief tourism inspector of Lam Dong Province, Mai Viet Dang.

Read the full article at ABC News.

Matthew Clayfield

Matthew Clayfield is a journalist, critic and screenwriter.

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