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In Vietnam, world’s largest cave still attracting tourists – but only locals
- As Covid-19 swept the globe, residents of Vietnam's Quang Binh province catering to international travellers saw customer numbers plummet
- But Son Doong cave has weathered the crisis fairly well overall, thanks to a boost in visitors from among the country’s fast-growing middle class
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Agence France-Pressein Phong Nha, Vietnam
Vast rock formations the size of multistorey buildings loom above Ho Minh Phuc, as he picks a path through the gloom inside the world’s largest cave.
Phuc, who once earned a living through illegal logging, is a porter for the small tour groups that explore Vietnam’s Son Doong – a cave so large it has its own ecosystem and weather patterns.
Home to flying foxes and a 70-metre rock formation resembling a dog’s paw, the cave is an otherworldly wonder that has reshaped the lives of the surrounding community since it opened for boutique tourism in 2013.
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Trapped in poverty, young men like Phuc once had little choice but to forage in the depths of Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park – the World Heritage Site where Son Doong lies.

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There they searched for precious agarwood, a hugely sought-after material known as “the wood of the gods” and widely used for incense.
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