Kenya’s tourism will take up to three years to recover from the current slowdown caused by insecurity and travel advisories.
It is expected to be back on its feet in 2018 after the next general elections.
“The
industry will take two-three years to recover. This year is already
struggling after the Garissa attack,” Kenya Tourism Federation chief
executive Agatha Juma said.
According to the Kenya
Association of Hotelkeepers and Caterers Coast branch executive officer,
Sam Ikwaye, everyone who relies on tourism is now feeling the pinch.
“We
are terribly concerned; The earliest we can recover is in 2018 because
in 2016, the country will be warming up to elections for 2017, so the
earliest we can see signs of recovery is 2018, that is if all goes
well,” Mr Ikwaye said.
Experts have urged the
government to focus on traditional European markets, which have
supported Kenya’s Coast. “Few of them have actual travel warnings such
as the UK. Germany, for instance, with the largest population and
spending power, is the only country for now still running charters to
Mombasa all year round,” said Mr Chris Modigell, a former committee
member of the tourism recovery task force.
Scheduled
flights to Mombasa from traditional source markets are from Turkey via
Istanbul and Ethiopia via Addis Ababa and are shared with Kilimanjaro
and Zanzibar.
The Kenya Tourism Board has allocated
Sh15 million to be channelled towards charter airline promotions to
improve traffic to the destination.
The board in March this year announced it would set aside over Sh140 million for global advertisement campaigns.
“The
campaigns will showcase our diversity mostly in key source markets in
Europe, America, Asia, Africa and the rest of the potential markets to
Kenya,” board managing director Muriithi Ndegwa said in Berlin.
However,
a month later the country was hit by another image-denting nightmare —
the Garissa University College attack that claimed more than 140 lives
which brought tourism to its knees.
It has since been struggling to save face and reassure potential visitors in a bid to get them to come.
It has since been struggling to save face and reassure potential visitors in a bid to get them to come.
The
recently released 2015 Economic Survey placed 2014 tourist arrival
figures at 11.1 per cent lower compared with 2013. This was, however,
disputed by the industry which said the situation is much worse than
depicted by the report.
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