Philippine minister says Dora can’t explore pristine Palawan

A view of Pangulasian Island from El-Nido resort island in Palawan, Philippines. (AFP file photo)
Updated 11 January 2017
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Philippine minister says Dora can’t explore pristine Palawan

MANILA, Philippines: American children’s television network Nickelodeon will not be allowed to build an underwater theme park on one of the nation’s most pristine islands, the Philippine environment minister said Wednesday.
Nickelodeon’s parent firm announced Monday it would build a “themed attraction” inspired by its cartoon characters such as Dora the Explorer and SpongeBob SquarePants as part of a 400-hectare (1,000-acre) development on Palawan, generating alarm from environmentalists.
Environment Secretary Gina Lopez said Wednesday she would reject the project.
“Lopez says she won’t allow the underwater theme park in Palawan. #environment2017,” the environment department posted on its Twitter account.
In an interview with ABS-CBN television, Lopez said she would not allow any project that would damage the environment and the welfare of local communities.
“That’s our wealth. It’s not allowed. You can’t kill the corals. For a theme park? No. No way, man,” said Lopez, who has been a vocal opponent of mining projects in Palawan.
“The commitment of the government is first and foremost and always, always to the benefit of our people.”
Conservation groups call Palawan the nation’s “last ecological frontier” because of its relatively untouched coastlines and forests, which are among the oldest and most diverse in Southeast Asia.
Palawan is home to two UNESCO World Heritage-listed sites, a subterranean river and the Tubbataha coral reefs.
Monday’s statement by Nickelodeon’s parent firm, Viacom International Media Networks, said its resort would open in 2020 and feature restaurants and lounges six meters (20 feet) below sea level.
It also said the Palawan project would “take its place alongside” other Nickelodeon-branded attractions such as Wet’n’Wild in Australia, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Land in Russia and IMG Worlds of Legends theme park in Dubai.
An online petition organized by local environmentalists calling for the project to be stopped attracted more than 125,000 signatures in less than 24 hours.
Viacom’s Philippine partner, Coral World Park, issued a statement on Wednesday insisting the development was not a “theme park” and emphasised that it would not all be underwater.
The statement also highlighted the project’s “ocean conservation focus” and said it would help fund environmental protection in the area.
It referred to plans for a marine sanctuary and said the Coral World Park would “be the largest coral reef conservation program in Asia.”
“There has never been any form of communication from our side mentioning a theme park,” said Coral World Park marketing and communications director Susan Lee.


Why Jordanians are flocking to Damascus as Syria reopens roads, skies and rails

Updated 15 February 2026
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Why Jordanians are flocking to Damascus as Syria reopens roads, skies and rails

  • Tour buses, budget flights and reopened crossings signal renewed civilian travel between Jordan and postwar Syria
  • Officials say mobility revival reflects deeper regional reintegration as Damascus sheds isolation and rebuilds tourism sector

DUBAI: Ask nearly any Jordanian over the age of 40 about Damascus and you are likely to be met with a nostalgic tale of days gone by when weekend trips to the old city were as common as those to the Dead Sea.

Such memories were confined to the pits of nostalgia by the onset of the Syrian civil war, which turned the once-famed journey into an ordeal of derelict rest stops, militia checkpoints, sudden closures and the possibility of violence.

However, over the last year, tour buses have reappeared on the centuries-old trade route. Private drivers are booking permits to take the road north and a new generation of Jordanian travelers, eager for regional rediscovery, are getting back on the road to Damascus.

A view of the Jaber-Nassib crossing on the border between Syria and Jordan. (AFP/file photo)

Statistics released by Syria’s Ministry of Tourism show that Jordanians are by far the largest group of tourists represented in Syria, with 394,871 arrivals in 2025 alone — some 93 percent more than the previous year and eclipsing any other nation, including those with substantial Syrian populations like Turkiye and Germany.

These figures represent “not only the reactivation of tourism flows, but a deeper strategic recovery extending beyond the economic domain,” Mazen Al-Salhani, Syria’s minister of tourism, said in a statement.

“It signals a transition to organized, civilian-driven mobility and a restored perception of Syria as a safe, attractive and culturally rich destination.”

FASTFACT

395K

Jordanians who visited Syria in 2025, up 93% on the previous year, making them the country’s largest tourist group.

Jordan and Syria share not only a border, but also centuries of cultural, familial and economic ties. The Nasib-Jaber crossing on the Damascus-Amman highway was one of the busiest gateways in the region before the civil war.

That crossing’s reactivation is symbolic of a wider lifting of barriers. While the border was closed intermittently in late 2024 amid renewed conflict, the crossing has now been revitalized, streamlining the process of getting permissions for vehicles and border patrol checks.

Hamzeh Battieh, executive manager of Sharif House Handcrafted Travel and Events, a tourism operator based in Damascus, told Arab News the crossing had become substantially easier to navigate, transforming from somewhere that was once quite hostile into something quite welcoming.

A group of Jordanian tourists are seen at the ruins of Palmyra, Syria. (Photo courtesy: youngpioneertours.com)

“Following the liberation of Syria, the situation at the crossing changed fundamentally for the better,” he said.

“The time required to complete entry or exit procedures no longer exceeds 10 minutes, whereas under the former regime it used to take many hours and involved widespread bribery and favoritism.

“Visitors are now received with warm hospitality. Many travelers have repeatedly heard officers at the crossing say to passengers: ‘Welcome home, you have illuminated our country’.”

Jordanian tour operators, who for years pivoted travelers to Istanbul, Cairo, or Beirut, now report growing inquiries for tours that include Damascus’ ancient souks, the Umayyad Mosque and day trips to historic sites such as Bosra.

Meanwhile, a growing number of independent travelers are making the Amman-Damascus bus route part of their itineraries, sharing tips online about passports, bus times and border crossing formalities.

Battieh said the fall of the Bashar Assad regime had made Syria a substantially freer and easier country to navigate.“

Ruins the Decumanus Maximus in the ancient City of Bosra, Syria. Once a center of Roman, Byzantine and Muslim civilizations, the site was inscribed by UNESCO on the list of World Heritage Sites in 1980. (Shutterstock photo)

Tourism has indeed begun to return to Syria, but with a new spirit, free of the difficulties and complications that were imposed during the era of the former regime,” he said.

“Starting from border and airport police and extending to public roads, today, procedures for entering Syria have become smoother and far more welcoming.”

Syria’s comparable affordability as a destination is reportedly another appeal that is attracting Jordanians to venture north.

According to Hussein Halaqat, a spokesperson for the Jordan Hotels Association, domestic tourism in Jordan declined during the first three days of the last Eid Al-Adha holiday due in part to the lower-cost travel on offer across the northern border.

The ruins of the Jaabar Citadel (Qalaat Jaabar) in Syria's in Raqqa province. (AFP/file)

“Prices in Syria are lower than in Jordan, particularly compared with Jordan’s five-star seaside hotels in Aqaba and the Dead Sea, which not everyone can afford,” he told Erem News.

He said the queues at coach stops in the capital, Amman, for services heading to Syria, which can cost as little as 15 Jordanian dinars ($21) per passenger, were indicative of the rising competition that regional integration could bring.

Battieh said Jordanians were particularly drawn to Damascus and Aleppo for their historical significance and famed cuisine. Many of Damascus’ most famous restaurants had moved to Amman during the war, creating a local following.

“A visitor can easily spend at least one full week in Damascus alone, exploring landmarks such as the Umayyad Mosque, Al-Azem Palace, and famous traditional markets like Al-Hamidiyah Souq and Al-Buzuriyah,” he said.

An aerial picture shows a view of the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus at dawn. (AFP/file photo)

“They also really love the city’s diverse cuisine, Damascene ice cream, traditional cafes such as Al-Nawfara Cafe and historic public bathhouses like Hammam Al-Malik Al-Zahir.”

As the road to Damascus is reconnected with its southern neighbor, so too are its skies. In early January, a Royal Jordanian commercial flight landed at Damascus International Airport, marking the restoration of the Amman-Damascus air corridor after a 14-year hiatus.

The flight, organized as a technical trial, carried a Jordanian delegation of aviation experts tasked with assessing the airport’s readiness to resume regular operations.

While modest in scale, the flight was heavy with symbolism — a sign that Damascus was once again reentering regional airspace after more than a decade of isolation.

Royal Jordanian now offers four weekly flights between Amman, Jordan, and Damascus, Syria. (AFP/file photo)

Since then, travel has surged, with Royal Jordanian offering four weekly flights between the two capitals. With a flight time of just 25 minutes, the route is intended to close the gap for road-weary travelers, while giving Syrians access to more destinations through an Amman transit.

Moreover, perhaps more ambitiously, the two countries have agreed to restore a historic rail link that once connected Damascus and Amman. The Hijaz Railway project aims to have passengers traveling between the two cities as early as this year.

Although the timeline remains unclear, Zahi Khalil, director-general and deputy chairman of the Jordan Hijaz Railway at the Jordanian Ministry of Transport, told Arab News that plans are well underway.

“Regarding the connection process — the link between Damascus and Amman — it could be ready by the end of 2026.”

Train wagons are stationed at a Jordan-Hijaz Railway station in Amman. (AFP/file photo)

Historically, the Hijaz Railway was part of the Ottoman rail network and served as a major link between Damascus and Makkah, reducing a journey that once took 40 days to just five.

Seen by the sultan at the time as a symbol of Islamic unity and progress, the railway holds deep historical and cultural significance across the region.

Khalil said much of the historic track would be rehabilitated, upgraded for modern trains and reused, with large sections of the original route still intact.

“Once Syria is linked to the Turkish rail lines, Amman will be connected all the way to Istanbul,” he said.

A Syrian whirling dervish dancer from the Aleppo Heritage Ensemble performs during the festival of "Nights of Spiritual Music" at Qasr al-Adhm in Damascus late September 7, 2008. (AFP/file photo)

For Jordanian tourists, these developments reinforce a sense that Syria is no longer a place visited only out of necessity or for nostalgia, but one that is once again accessible by choice.

For Syrians like Battieh, these changes represent something far deeper — a reclaiming of mobility after years of enforced paralysis, and a signal that reintegration into the region is no longer theoretical, but operational.

“Syria has room for all who love her,” Battieh said. “Welcome to the new Syria. As the French archaeologist Andre Parrot once said: ‘Every civilized person has two homelands: Their own, and Syria’.”