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'Deep pockets' only: Prepare to pay US$500 to visit Komodo National Park

“Those who don’t have the money shouldn’t visit the park since it specifically caters to extraordinary people,” the governor said.

News Desk (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Thu, November 22, 2018

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'Deep pockets' only: Prepare to pay US$500 to visit Komodo National Park Komodo dragons in Rinca Island, Flores, East Nusa Tenggara. (JP/Wienda Parwitasari)

T

he East Nusa Tenggara (NTT) administration is reportedly planning to raise the Komodo National Park’s entrance fee to at least US$500 as part of efforts to boost the conservation area’s “prestige”.

East Nusa Tenggara Governor Viktor Bungtilu Laiskodat recently warned that tourists must pay a lot more to see Komodo dragons. He added that the park had to maintain a certain degree of prestige as it was the only place in the world where people can see the endangered species in their natural habitat.

“[Komodo dragons] are highly unique, but sadly they come cheap; I will discuss the matter with the central government. We expect to issue a strict rule setting the park’s minimum entrance fee for tourists to $500,” Viktor said as quoted by kompas.com in Kupang, NTT, on Wednesday.

He further claimed that the additional income the NTT administration received from the park was not significant, because the world-famous tourist destination was managed by the central government.

Viktor also expected to set a different rate — starting from $50,000 — for recreational ships entering Komodo National Park.

“Only people with deep pockets are allowed to [see the komodo dragons]. Those who don’t have the money shouldn’t visit the park since it specifically caters to extraordinary people,” he said.

Previously, the government planned to limit the number of visitors to Komodo National Park in a bid to maintain the ecosystem’s stability following a fire in August, which razed hectares of grasslands.

The park, an official UNESCO World Heritage site, has welcomed a growing number of tourists both from Indonesia and overseas. However, the influx has triggered a number of environmental problems, including fires, that have affected the park’s landscape, according to the Environment and Forestry Ministry’s director general for natural resources and ecosystems, Wiratno. (rfa)

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