By MATHIAS RINGA, mringa@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Mr Balala said the funds are still available, adding that the billions would be spent on the intended purpose over the next six months.
- The Treasury released Sh450 million in October for tourism promotion as part of the marketing budget that was delayed due to a cash crunch that stalled payment of essential services.
- Kenya had hoped to launch a marketing offensive in Western capitals from August to woo tourists to its beaches and game parks.
Tourism secretary Najib Balala has moved to calm
tourism investor nerves about the Sh5.2 billion marketing promotion cash
yet to be released half way through the financial year.
Mr Balala said the funds are still available, adding that
the billions would be spent on the intended purpose over the next six
months.
The Treasury released Sh450 million in October for
tourism promotion as part of the marketing budget that was delayed due
to a cash crunch that stalled payment of essential services.
Kenya had hoped to launch a marketing offensive in Western capitals from August to woo tourists to its beaches and game parks.
“Beginning January, we shall market Kenya across
the world than before to uplift international tourist arrivals
countrywide,” Mr Balala said.
“Europe will be the centre of focus as the majority of the tourists visiting our country come from the West.”
Mr Balala said Sh2 billion would be allocated to
the Kenya Tourism Board (KTB) for international marketing with an
emphasis on the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy.
He added that the promotion budget for domestic
tourism would be increased, saying most hotels at the Coast had since
last year stayed afloat due to local guests.
Meanwhile, Mohammed Hersi, chairman of the Kenya
Coast Tourism Association, will join the KTB board of directors to
represent the Coast tourism circuit, the minister said.
Marketing campaign
Mr Hersi is the CEO of the luxury Heritage Group hotel chain, owned by the Kenyatta family.
The planned marketing campaign comes months after
the US and Britain, key source markets for Kenya’s tourism, downgraded
their travel advisories against most parts of the Coast including
Mombasa, Kilifi and Watamu.
The warnings were issued after repeated attacks by Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab in 2013.
Tourism is a vital foreign exchange earner for the country.
A two-year slump had forced most hotels at the Coast
to shut or cut jobs sending the shilling tumbling to lows last seen
three and a-half-years ago.
Besides hotels, tourists support auxiliary sectors like handicraft makers, taxi business and fishermen.
The Cable News Network (CNN) promotion is
particularly good news for hoteliers who blame the government for doing
too little to revive the sector that employs about 150,000 people.
Official data indicates that tourism earnings fell
7.3 per cent to Sh87.1 billion in 2014, down from Sh94 billion the
previous year.
Over the period, tourist numbers dropped from 1.5 million to 1.3 million.
The trend has continued this year with the number
of visitors coming to Kenya falling 13.7 per cent in the 10 months to
October compared to the same period last year.
However the drop in the period to October is small compared to the 25.4 per cent plunge recorded in the first five months to May.
However the drop in the period to October is small compared to the 25.4 per cent plunge recorded in the first five months to May.
The KTB data shows 628,345 arrivals in the period to October, down from 728,128 in the same period last year.
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