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          Shimla/Manali, May 28 (IANS) No bookings in the Kashmir Valley?   Head for the hills of Himachal Pradesh for your vacation.The hospitality   industry here says that with hotels in Srinagar valley chock-a-block full,   tourists are finding their way to the serene hills of Himachal Pradesh.
 
 |  "We are feeling relieved, as our worst fears of losing tourists to Srinagar is   now proving to be untrue," D.P. Bhatia of Clarke's Hotel in Shimla told   IANS.
 He said that from May 20, there had been a sharp increase in   tourists to Shimla and nearby destinations.
 
 "Economically, we are now   much better-off, with most of our properties finding good response with   tourists, mainly from Punjab, Haryana and Delhi," said Himachal Pradesh Tourism   Development Corporation general manager Yogesh Behl.
 
 Tourist footfalls   this season in the state, though delayed, had picked up, he said.
 
 "Since   Srinagar gets fully booked, people are now opting for destinations here in   Himachal Pradesh. We are hoping for even greater inflows as the onset of next   month's Amarnath Yatra pilgrimage would discourage tourists from choosing to   holiday in Kashmir," Behl told IANS.
 
 Besides state capital Shimla, other   destinations preferred by tourists to Himachal Pradesh include the hill stations   of Kullu, Manali and Dharamsala.
 
 The state tourism department is daily   getting 20 to 25 enquiries from those who cancel their bookings in the Kashmir   Valley.
 
 "We are here after we failed to get good accommodation in either   Srinagar or nearby areas," said Abhijit Prashar, now holidaying in Shimla with   his wife.
 
 Gajender Thakur, president of the Manali Hoteliers Association,   said that the current occupancy rate for Manali hotels was 80 percent.
 Travel   agents, however, feel that the comparatively tougher journey to the hill state   is still keeping the high-end tourists away.
 
 "There's been a considerable   drop-off in high-end, especially corporate, visitors, this time owing to poor   air connectivity," said Manali Travel Agents Association president Anil   Sharma.
 
 The air tariff on the Delhi-Kullu circuit is also higher compared   to the Delhi-Srinagar one.
 
 "Moreover, flights to Kullu often remain   erratic," Sharma added.
 
 According to the tourism department, Shimla and   Manali are expecting an average of 40,000-50,000 tourists each during every   weekend in June.
 
 The annual tourist arrivals in Himachal Pradesh crossed   15 million in 2011.
 
 The number of foreign tourists visiting the state has   more than doubled from a little over 200,000 in 2005 to nearly half a million in   2011.
 
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