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Red Dao women walk past Topas Ecolodge on the outskirts of northern Sapa tourist town, on September 30. Getting to the top traditionally takes a two-day trek but these days most visitors opt for a 20-minute ride by cable car. Image Credit: AFP

SAPA, Vietnam: At the top of Vietnam’s Fansipan Mountain, throngs of giddy tourists wielding selfie sticks jostle for a photo op on the once-remote peak in the Sapa region, famed for its breathtaking views across undulating rice terraces.

Getting to the top traditionally takes a two-day trek but these days most visitors opt for a 20-minute ride by cable car instead — the latest flashy tourist attraction to heighten concerns over rapid development destroying Sapa’s natural beauty.

Known by some as the Tonkinese Alps, the former French outpost has seen a tourism boom in recent years with a new highway from the capital and hotels popping up at breakneck pace.

“If more and more building (happens), then one day we will lose Sapa, we won’t have any more mountain,” said guide Giang Thi Lang, from the Black Hmong ethnic group.

Vietnam’s tourism industry has taken off in recent years, especially among domestic visitors with growing appetites and budgets for travel.

The country has also become a draw for foreign visitors turning their backs on better-known Southeast Asian destinations such as Thailand’s Chiang Mai, seeking instead a road less travelled.

But some lament the commercialisation of Vietnamese treasures, with reports of locals complaining about multi-course meals served in Ha Long Bay’s famous caves, or trash-strewn beaches in the resort town of Phu Quoc.

In Sapa town, where heaps of rubble mark hotel sites under construction, the number of rooms has surged from 2,500 in 2010 to 4,000 last year, according to official figures.

Visitor numbers have snowballed too, reaching around 700,000 last year, and revenues have more than tripled since 2010 to $50 million.

Part of that growth is thanks to the cable car — the longest of its kind in the world according to operators — which opened in February with the capacity to ferry 2,000 people to the top of the mountain daily.

“It’s good for Sapa when they can attract more tourists ... and we have a big number of the local people that can find jobs,” said Nguyen Van Manh, deputy director of Sapa’s Tourist Information Center, adding that the sector provided employment to thousands.

But some locals tell a different story.

“Before the cable car, there were more porters from the village with regular work,” said Hmong trekking guide Ma A Tro from Fansipan’s summit, where he had just led a two-day trip.

“Now with the cable car there, village residents no longer have jobs, mostly becoming freelance construction workers.”

The government ignored opposition to the cable car, he said, lamenting that business has dwindled since its construction with fewer people climbing the mountain.

“We talked to them, but they didn’t listen. The central government came and said they had to do it, so they did it,” he added.

Some tourists also say Sapa is losing its appeal, with Fansipan’s picturesque summit replaced by concrete steps, souvenir shops and still-under-construction temples.

“I imagined I would come to the top and it would be really natural, but it’s developed here, so for me it’s a bit disappointing,” said trekker Duong Hoang Minh, who hiked to the top of the 3,143-metre (10,311-foot) peak.

But still, he decided to take the cable car down and agreed that more people can enjoy the mountain because of it.

“For other people I think it’s better because it’s safer for them,” said the 23-year-old teacher, his white sweatpants slicked with fresh mud.

Most tourism operators agree the boom has brought much-needed development — roads, schools and clinics, for example — to a region where the majority of the population belong to one of Vietnam’s 53 ethnic minorities, who have traditionally lagged behind the rest of the country.

But without sustainable growth Sapa risks “shooting itself in the foot”, said Hubert de Murard, manager of the Topas Ecolodge about 18 kilometres (11 miles) from Sapa town.

The lodge, with its 25 white granite bungalows overlooking a rice terraced valley, employs mostly locals, was built using materials found nearby and was designed to blend in with the surrounding environment — a business model de Murard said he’d like to see newcomers adopt.

He worries that some investments have been short-sighted, aimed at maximising the number of visitors.

“For a natural destination like here, with a preserved environment, this would not really be good,” he told AFP as the sun set over the yawning valley behind him.

“We need to be a bit more careful to avoid the mistake of mass tourism in Sapa.”

— AFP