Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnam’s legal system through different periods of time has prescribed the preservation and promotion of cultural herit🌟age.
Cultural heritage is valuable resources contributing to creating the image of a nation. Vietnam that underwent thousands of years of construction now boasts diverse cultural heritage.Preserving and promoting values of Vietnam’s cultural heritage
Heritage has been built up by generations of ancestors. Therefore, preserving heritage and relic sites is an urgent task. On November 23, 1945, President Ho Chi Minh issued Decree No. 65/SL on preserving fairy tales, saying the protection work is very important to national construction. Article 4 of the decree bans the destruction of pagodas, temples and other worshipping places like palaces, citadels and tombs, along with religious documents. The Prime Minister signed Decision No. 36/QD-TTG on January 24, 2005, designating November 23 each year as Vietnam Culture Heritage Day with the aim of promoting traditions and raising public awareness of cultural heritage preservation and promotion.The Resolution issued at the fifth plenum of the 8th Party Central Committee also set fo🌊rth the task of protecting and carrying forward values of cultural heritage, both tangible and intangible.
Heritage helps to spur tourism development
Vietnam is home to various tangible, cultural, natural and document heritage recognised by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), along with tens of thousands of historical and cultural relic sites, landscape, festivals, craft villages, traditional cuisines and arts. Such diverse resources have created conditions for localities across the country to promote tourism, contributing to poverty reduction. Many localities have appeared in the national tourism map.Hue, the formal imperial capital of Vietnam for hundreds of years, is home to five heritages recognised by UNESCO, including the ancient citadel relic complex (a World Cultural Heritage site), Hue royal court music (an intangible cultural heritage item), Nguyen Dynasty’s wood blocks (a documentary heritage item), Nguyen Dynasty’s royal administrative documents (part of the Asia-Pacific Register of UNESCO’s Memory of the World Programme), and literature on Hue royal architecture (another documentary heritage).
The Hue imperial citadel relic site has been ranked second among th🌠e top seven tourist attractions of Vietnam in 2017.
In 2018, the Hue Monuments Conservation Centre earned 381.7 billion VND (16.4 million USD) from serving over 3.5 million tourists, up 19 percent compared to the target set.
The centre has implemented 24 restoration projec🍰ts with total investment exceeding 278.8 billion VND (11.9 million USD).
Meanwhile, Ha Long city in the northeastern province of Quang Ninh welcomed 7.9 million visitors in nine months of this year, up 21 percent.
Tourism revenue surpassed 15.7 trillion VND (682.6 million USD), up 35 percent annually.
The World Heritage Site Ha Long Bay is now home to about 500 cruise vessels, 189 of them offer overnight accommo🦋dation.
In September, Ha Long Bay was named as one of the most popular attractions in Asia, according to the South China Morning Post (SCMP) based in Hong Kong.
Around𓂃 5.2 million foreigners visited Ha Long Bay in 2018, up 22 percent from a year ago, accounting for 30 percent of the 15.6 million foreign tourist arrivals to Vietnam.
Towards sustainable development
Ha Van Sieu, deputy head of the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism, culture-based tourism has been defined as one of the four main tourism products of Vietnam. He, however, pointed out adverse impacts of the blooming tourism sector on cultural heritage and the environment.