Amboseli National Park. Serengeti national park charges $50 (Sh4,345)
compared to Amboseli and Lake Nakuru parks which have been charging $80
(Sh6,952 before VAT). PHOTO/FILE
The Kenya Wildlife Service has increased
fees for tourists visiting national parks, game reserves and other
wildlife sanctuaries, sparking an outcry from key players in the tourism
sector.
The new fees arise from a 16 per cent Value
Added Tax (VAT) imposed on tourism activities following the
implementation of the VAT Act 2013 in September last year.
In
an advertisement published Monday, KWS said that nature lovers will pay
more starting this month for visits to the national parks, game
reserves and sanctuaries that it manages.
“KWS would
like to inform our esteemed clients that all conservation fees for
national parks, reserves and sanctuaries under KWS management will be
adjusted to include 16 per cent VAT from January 2014,” said the notice
published in Monday’s Daily Nation.
In the past, East
African citizens and residents were paying Sh1,000 for a day’s ticket to
prime parks like Amboseli while non-residents were paying $80. These
fee has now gone up by 16 per cent to account for VAT.
Adults visiting wilderness parks like Tsavo East and West were paying
Sh500 for East African citizens, Sh1,000 for residents and $65 for
non-residents.
All these charges have gone up with a
brochure published online indicating that those visiting Amboseli or
Nakuru National Parks will pay Sh1,200 for residents; those visiting
wilderness parks like Tsavo East and West will pay Sh600. Before the VAT
law was passed, entry fees to KWS managed parks were tax exempt.
Players
in the tourism industry at the Coast expressed outrage at the increase.
The said the region was already losing potential tourists to Tanzania
where game parks charge relatively lower fees compared to Kenya.
Ms
Monika Solanki, the Kenya Association of Tour Operators (Kato) Coast
branch chairperson, said the number of tourists visiting parks and game
reserves will decline further due to the higher fees.
South Africa, Namibia and Botswana are other destinations competing against Kenya for tourist numbers.
The VAT charge will also apply any other service offered inside the parks, according to KWS communications officer Paul Mbugua.
“Of
course any increase in fees will attract complaints from visitors and
some people might opt not to visit,” Mr Mbugua told the Nation Monday.
“Our rates are relatively favourable compared to what our neighbouring
countries charge.”
Ms Solanki said Serengeti national
park charges $50 (Sh4,345) compared to Amboseli and Lake Nakuru parks
which have been charging $80 (Sh6,952 before VAT). Tanzania’s Lake
Manyara park charges $35 while Kenya’s Tsavo East and West national
parks will be charging $65 for non-residents.
Kenya has a total of 54 national parks and reserves with the largest of these parks being Tsavo East and West national parks.
Ms
Solanki said hotels at the Coast will be hit by a shortage of guests
because tourists heading to cheaper Tanzanian parks could opt for hotels
in Zanzibar which also has beautiful beaches.
“The few
tourists who will be coming to the Coast will decide to spend their
time in the hotels rather than go on safaris,” she said and warned that
KWS’s revenue collection could fall due to a decline in the number of
visitors to the parks.
Mombasa and Coast Tourist
Association (MCTA) chairman Mohamed Hersi said the new fees will make
Kenya the most expensive tourist destination in Africa.
The
increment, he said, comes at a time when the number of international
tourist arrivals has declined owing to terrorism threats and the
economic recession in European.
Mr Hersi, who is also
the Heritage Hotels chief executive officer, said the sector might
suffer a setback as potential tourists will opt to go to Tanzania for
safaris and Zanzibar for leisure holidays.
Kenya
Association of Hotelkeepers and Caterers (KAHC) Coast branch executive
officer Sam Ikwaye said the tax should be shelved until the industry
recovers from the slump experienced last year.
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