Why Kashmir’s Ghanta Ghar Defeats Its Tourism Pitch |
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Why Kashmir’s Ghanta Ghar Defeats Its Tourism Pitch
The announcement of the Kashmir Travel Mart 2026 has been received with the usual optimism. Stakeholders will gather, presentations will be made, brochures will be printed, and speeches will echo with words like potential, paradise, and hospitality. Wazwan will be the bar girl gyrating around the table.
And yet, the uncomfortable truth remains. Tourists do not travel to presentations. They travel to perceptions.
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Then there is the illusion of promotion, and governments across the world often make the same mistake. They believe tourism is a function of promotion.
It is not. Tourism is a function of trust. We lose it every time when we swarm with protests at Ghanta Ghar; even if their reasons may be legitimate.
You can bring 250 stakeholders into a hall, but you cannot bring one hesitant family into a destination where their instincts tell them not to go.
No amount of curated networking can override a single lingering doubt. The doubt of ‘will we be safe – not just physically, but emotionally?’
Kashmir today suffers from a deeper contradiction than infrastructure, connectivity, or policy.
On one hand, it invites tourists with open arms. On promotional reels and sponsored slots, we promote hospitality as if we are the only ones to know it. But on the other hand, we project a psychological distance that can quietly unsettle even the strong-willed tourist.
This........