
Pakistan bans new hotels near scenic lakes to protect nature from environmental devastation
Unregulated construction of hotels and guest houses in Gilgit-Baltistan — which boasts around 13,000 glaciers, more than any other country on Earth outside the polar regions — has sparked major concerns about environmental degradation.
The natural beauty of the region has made it a top tourist destination, with towering peaks looming over the Old Silk Road, and a highway transporting tourists between cherry orchards, glaciers, and ice-blue lakes.
However, in recent years construction has exploded led by companies from outside the region, straining water and power resources, and increasing waste.
'If we let them construct hotels at such pace, there will be a forest of concrete,' Khadim Hussain, a senior official at the Gilgit-Baltistan Environmental Protection Authority told AFP on Friday.
'People don't visit here to see concrete; people come here to enjoy natural beauty,' he added.
Last month, a foreign tourist posted a video on Instagram — which quickly went viral — alleging wastewater was being discharged by a hotel into Lake Attabad, which serves as a freshwater source for Hunza.
The next day, authorities fined the hotel more than US$5,000.
Asif Sakhi, a political activist and resident of the Hunza Valley, welcomed the ban.
'We have noticed rapid changes in the name of tourism and development,' he said, adding hotel construction was 'destroying our natural lakes and rivers'.
Shah Nawaz, a hotel manager and local resident of the valley, also praised the ban, saying he believes 'protecting the environment and natural beauty is everyone's responsibility'. — AFP
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The Sun
15 minutes ago
- The Sun
Malaysia targets high-value tourists for Visit Malaysia 2026 campaign
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The Star
44 minutes ago
- The Star
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Malay Mail
11 hours ago
- Malay Mail
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Activists accuse landlords of preferring short-term tourist lets to less-profitable extended leases. On Ibiza, nearly 800 people have resorted to living in makeshift settlements, according to local authorities' figures from last year, which don't include an estimated 200 who lived in shacks, tents and vans at the 'Can Rovi 2' camp before being evicted last month. A DJ plays music in front of a castle surrounded by medieval fortifications, at a hotel rooftop in Ibiza, Spain, July 29, 2025. — Reuters pic 'The island is paradise, the most beautiful place I've ever seen. But it has a flipside,' said Jeronimo Diana, a 50-year-old water technician from Argentina who stayed at Can Rovi 2. A normal monthly rent would swallow most of his €1,800 (RM8,865) salary, Diana said. Ibiza's average rents peaked at €33.7 per square metre in July last year, a 23 per cent rise from July 2023, data from property website Idealista shows. That translates to about €1,500 for a small one-bedroom apartment. 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Alejandra, a 31-year-old Colombian with a residence permit, lives in a shelter managed by Catholic charity Caritas after failing to secure a rental. She said she slept in a tent with her 3-year-old son David until they were evicted. Alejandra said she had a new hotel job and wanted to move out of the shelter, but worried about losing work 'for being slow' as she raced to log the Social Security contributions required to renew her permit. Social workers Gustavo Gomez and Belen Torres, who run the Caritas shelter, said landlords routinely discriminate against families with children and evict tenants to replace them with tourists during the more lucrative summer months. Jonathan Ariza, 25, from Colombia, plays with his dogs in front of the caravan where he lives in Ibiza, Spain, July 28, 2025. — Reuters pic Local authorities are cracking down on illegal tourist rentals, imposing fines that start at €40,001 on those who post them. 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