Some say it's about facing the truth,  others call it tasteless tourism. A  moral judgment of people's travel  choices is never easy and perhaps shouldn't be attempted. However, there  are some places on the world's tourist map that really give us mixed  feelings and can hardly be called "attractions".
Dharavi Slum in Mumbai, India
The idea to take the tour of Asia's  largest slum may be quite hard to justify, but one thing is  certain  - it is a sobering visit.  Oppressive odor, heart-breaking  conditions and poverty that goes beyond imagination are a depressing  reality for about 1 million people. Now that it's been  popularized by the Oscar-winning Slumdog Millionaire,  Dharavi draws countless visitors willing to "get the real taste of  distress". On the one hand, the revenues from the tours are said to go  directly to the community, which is very honorable. On the other, there  is something inherently strange about wanting to watch other people's  suffering, isn't there? 
North Korea
Landscape wise, North Korea could be the  world's prominent tourist magnet. Dramatic mountain scenery, pristine  lagoons, waterfalls and amazing Buddhist temples are enough to tempt a  visitor. But there seems to be a moral dilemma whether to sponsor a  state that's infamous for its nuclear weapons program  and inhumane practices.  Even if you decide to go to look for the truth,  at all times you will be accompanied by a government-appointed  guide. In the end, all you get is false historical  accounts and laudatory speeches instead of a real experience.  Then why go at all? 
Plastinarium in Guben, Germany
Plastination is a  technique used in anatomy to preserve a body for study purposes, but it  turns out that it can also be a good source of revenue. Dr  Gunther von Hagen's museum has stirred as much controversy as  it has received applause. What you can see here among other things are techniques  of dissection presented interactively and real human  bodies "involved" in all sorts of activities. 
While nobody is denying the huge  contribution Plastinarium makes to the training of medical students, was  it really necessary to seat the exhibits at the poker table or on a  bike?  And why would anyone other than a doctor or a young adept of  medicine want to see all this from up close? The truth is however that  since the opening in 2006, Plastinarium has received over a 100 thousand  visits.
Cu Chi Tunnels, Vietnam
 A 75-mile-long tunnel system,  bomb traps, scorpions, lethal spiders, unbearable humidity and lack of  space -  that's how Vietcong fighters hoped to ward off  American soldiers. This underground fortress hidden beneath the jungles  of South Vietnam was the site of  several bloody campaigns during the  Vietnam War. 
Today, it is a prime example of how  warfare can be turned into an  attraction.  The corridors have been  widened for the comfort of tourists and a firing range set up for their  entertainment. Visitors can pay $1 a bullet to shoot an AK-47  rifle used in the war as well as have a simple meal of food the  guerrilla soldiers would have had.  You don't have to look long for  souvenir stalls either. 
S-21, Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum is a  dramatic reminder of a security prison set up in 1975  by the Khmer Rouge communist regime. The tortures  inflicted on prisoners were so atrocious that, frankly,  one may really  wonder whether it's better to remember or forget. Skulls, rusting  torture beds, shackles and countless  mugshots of victims  make the visit to the "Strychnine Hill" (Tuol Sleng) a shattering  experience. The museum receives about 500 visitors every day. 
Devil's Island, French Guiana
Known as "the Green Hell" and described  as one of the world's most notorious penal colonies,  Devil's Island  ranks high among French Guiana's tourist attractions.  Run-down cells, the prison headquarters and an infant cemetery are all  part of the agenda. But is the once disease-plagued  island, where  thousands of convicts died in horrid conditions, really an attractive  place to visit? 
London Dungeon, UK
Laughing at death is one thing, but  making fun of somebody's suffering is quite another. The Dungeons are  undoubtedly one of London's premier attractions,  basically created to give an account of macabre medieval history.  However, it has evolved into a graphic spectacle of torture and a  bloody bunch of rather tasteless exhibits. There is a sense that all  those special effects, fun rides, and grim humor do not serve  educational purposes but only provide entertainment. And that's scary. 
Chernobyl, Ukraine
The whole world has heard of the  Chernobyl disaster. Today, 24 years after the accident at the  nuclear power station, more and more people decide to witness its  shattering consequences. Tours include sightseeing of Reactor 4,  a visit to Pripyat (a ghost town full of deserted apartment  buildings)... and measuring of radiation. And although  the Zone of Alienation (the 30 km/19 mi area around the power plant) is  considered relatively safe, the tours stir a lot of controversy for  obvious reasons. 
 
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