Date: 27 January 2013
300 Vietnamese Tourists To Visit Pulau Bidong, 22 Years
After It Was Closed.
KUALA TERENGGANU - In March, about 300 Vietnamese tourists
will visit Pulau Bidong, which was once a refugee camp for Vietnamese
"boat people' who escaped the new Communist rule after the Vietnam War
ended in 1975. The island, about 40km from here, will be reopened to visitors
this March after it was closed as a refugee camp on Oct 30, 1991.
Terengganu Tourism, Culture, Arts and Heritage Committee
chairman, Datuk Abdul Rahin Mohd Said said the 300 Vietnamese tourists were
among thousands of refugees who were now residing in a number of countries
including the United States and Australia.
"They are coming to see the monuments built and visit
the graves when Pulau Bidong was a refugee camp," he said, adding that the
state government allowed the visit but the visitors had to follow the
regulations set. Their lives have changed for the better and they now wish to
visit the graves of their ancestors and relatives who died on the island."
Abdul Rahin also said that the state government had approved
an allocation of RM200,000 to clean up and maintain the natural beauty of Pulau
Bidong, in line with the Terengganu Visit Year 2013 programme.
Pulau Bidong was handed back to the state government to be
made into a tourist attraction following the closure of the refugee camp there.
Copyright @ BERNAMA
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