Ambassador Ahmed Saleem and wife welcome the Sri Lankan high commissioner and his spouse at the independence day celebrations of Maldives in Islamabad.
Ambassador Ahmed Saleem hosted a large reception at Serena Hotel recently to celebrate the Maldives’ Independence Day, marked on July 26. The country gained independence from the British in 1965.
Minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry was invited to the event as the chief guest. During their speeches, the ambassador and the minister spoke about the close ties between the Maldives and Pakistan.
The Maldives is small country in the Indian Ocean, situated some 1,000 kilometres south of the Asian continent, with a population of less than half a million people. Last year, the country received more than a million tourists.
“Our economy and welfare rely heavily on tourism. Some European countries, which are very popular tourist destinations, have begun restricting their high numbers of tourists, such Venice in Italy and Norway, where the cruise ships disturb daily life more than people like in the picturesque small town harbours and fjords.
“In the Maldives, we have not reached that level and we are welcoming even higher numbers of tourists. We expand our infrastructure and develop new sites,” the ambassador said in a conversation.
Tourism accounts for about a third of the GDP and almost two-thirds of the foreign exchange earnings in the Maldives. The country’s GDP per capita is significantly higher than that of other countries in the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, which the Maldives co-founded in 1985.
The ambassador said that the Maldives has not been a member of the Commonwealth for some years, but will rejoin the organisation soon. In the future, it is likely that the country will be severely affected by sea level rise and flooding due to global warming.
“We set aside funds, mainly from tourism, to meet the challenges,” Ambassador Saleem said.
Published in Dawn, August 19th, 2019