By The Citizen Reporter and Agencies
In Summary
- Tourist arrivals broke the 1 million-barrier for the first time in 2012 when the number of foreign visitors surged 24 per cent.
- Most of the visitors came from Britain, Germany, the United States and Italy.
- Some Western tourists have found that due to their governments’ travel advisories about the security situation, their travel insurance does not cover them for the Kenyan coast
The number of tourists visiting the country is
expected to double to 2 million by 2017, according to the Tanzania
Tourist Board (TTB).
“We expect to reach 2 million tourist arrivals by 2017,” Reuters
news agency quoted TTB acting managing director Devota Mdachi as saying
at the weekend. “With more international airlines flying into Tanzania
... improved infrastructure, increased tourism investments and
marketing, we can reach that target,” she said.
Tourist arrivals broke the 1 million-barrier for
the first time in 2012 when the number of foreign visitors surged 24 per
cent. The number rose 1.7 per cent in 2013 to 1.095 million, bringing
in $1.85 billion (Sh3.15 trillion). Most of the visitors came from
Britain, Germany, the United States and Italy.
A surge in visitors to Tanzania in the past two
years has chipped away at Kenya’s dominance and boosted Tanzania’s
ambitions to become a regional tourist hub. The steep increase in the
number of tourists poses a direct challenge to regional rival Kenya
where militant attacks have scared away visitors.
Tourist arrivals in Kenya slid last year to 1.5
million after an all-time high of 1.8 million in 2011. In the first
quarter of 2014 the number of visitors dropped 4 per cent compared to
2013. A leading Kenyan hotel chain said the real figures were worse.
Frequent attacks by Somali militants have had a
devastating effect on Kenya’s tourism industry, scaring away tourists,
some of whom looked elsewhere for tropical beaches and wildlife safaris.
Some Western tourists have found that due to their governments’ travel
advisories about the security situation, their travel insurance does not
cover them for the Kenyan coast.
Zanzibar has experienced sporadic security
problems, with a series of bomb attacks over the past year, targeting
mosques, churches and restaurants, and acid attacks on a Catholic priest
and two British teenagers last year which were blamed on Islamist
militants.
But one tour operator in Zanzibar said the
archipelago had benefited from the fact that the problems were worse in
Kenya. “A lot of tourists who have cancelled their trips to (the Kenyan
port city of) Mombasa are now coming to Zanzibar and that’s something
that’s good for the local tourism industry.”
The impact on Kenya’s woes on Tanzania has been
mixed. While some operators say tourists are switching from Kenya to
Tanzania, others say they are suffering due to the fact that Nairobi
remains an air transit hub for the whole region.
“The Kenya security issues have impacted
negatively on Tanzania ... as 30-40 per cent of tourists visiting
Tanzania come through Kenya due to the fact that Kenya has more
international carriers,” Reuters quoted Ms Lathifa Sykes, CEO of the Hotels Association of Tanzania (HAT), as saying.
She said Tanzania’s tourism industry had the
potential for further growth over the coming years, but investments were
stifled by a complex and unpredictable tax regime, limited tourism
infrastructure and inadequate marketing and branding. Growth of 9 per
cent a year since 2010 could be accelerated to 20 per cent a year if the
government worked more closely with the private sector, Ms Sykes said.
Tourism employs about a third of Tanzania’s work
force and contributed 13 per cent of its gross domestic product (GDP) in
2012, making it a vital industry for a nation of 45 million people that
needs more jobs.
Like other African nations, tourist officials are
now worried that fears about the spread of the Ebola virus, which has
decimated tourism and other business in West Africa, could have knock on
effects on the other side of the continent.
“The message that we’ve been putting across is
that this disease (Ebola) has not entered Tanzania and so far we have
not had any cancellations,” said Ms Mdachi, adding that airlines for now
were saying their flights were still full.
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