Kenya could triple earnings from tourism by overhauling its
marketing strategy where a calendar of cultural and county events form
the specialty menu presented to the world.
Kenya
Wildlife Conservancies Association chief executive (KWCA) Dickson Ole
Kaelo said there was urgent need to initiate policy changes that
re-align roles by various State agencies and departments tasked with
marketing Kenya abroad with emphasis on individual county brands.
“The
world would really want to intermingle with Kenyans during cultural
events. The Lamu Swahili Festival with its donkey and canoe races,
Bukusu traditional circumcision ceremonies, the Maasai Moran activities
that attract Kenyan and Tanzanian Maasai youths, the Maralal Camel Derby
and athletic events among others, form a rich menu that would help
Kenya define its homegrown products away from the usual wildlife and
beach products,” he said.
While the 2017 Economic
Review showed Kenya earned Sh100 billion from 1.3 million tourists who
visited the country in 2016, Mr Kaelo said the nation must stop relying
on wildlife and beach-goers to power its billion-shilling tourism sector
as this generally benefits the rich and not locals.
“Redefine
our strategy to make it homegrown and give it an identity that attracts
thousands of domestic tourists. That is the catch for international
tourists keen on intermingling with people. Food and our rudimentary
rituals can triple our tourism numbers all year round instead of the
seasonal “take we have,” he said.
Mr Kaelo said Kenya
could also entrench a new thinking where further construction of lodges
and eco-camps within national parks and reserves, is permanently banned
in favour of tourist hotels outside the facilities.
“Wildlife
sanctuaries should become just that, a natural home for wild animals
that remains untouched and human activities within the park are
controlled.
This could re-invigorate nightlife in our
towns where tourists dance away the evening creating a 24-hour economy
among local communities living next to national parks,” he said.
Mr
Kaelo, who was involved in creation of Olare Orok, Motorogi, Mara North
and Naboisho Conservancies in the Mara, said a new way should be found
to help communities living within wildlife-rich regions to benefit from
the proceeds of tourism as a way of winning them over to supporting
conservation efforts.
He said the country needs to
adopt policies that help sustain livelihoods, improve the environment
within areas they operate from while enabling companies to make profits
from their ventures.
“We have done it for the 155
wildlife community conservancies and we are promoting a new offering
that creates a more diversified menu. Kenya should not be just about
wildlife and beaches,” he said.
The conservancies host 142 camps and eco-lodges boasting 2,463 beds and provide employment to 2,211 community wildlife scouts.
Mr
Kaelo said such empowerment could permanently address conflict between
next-door neighbours in wildlife-rich areas reducing incidents where
wild animals destroy crops, maim or kill people or residents trespass
into wildlife sanctuaries in search of food or game trophies.
While
he hailed the 17.8 per cent growth in tourism earnings, the KWCA boss
said the country must shield domestic tourism from vagaries of election
chaos that have in the past affected visitor arrivals. The best way to
achieve this, he said, is by promoting local tourism.
Currently,
71.9 per cent of tourists visit Kenya for holiday with most preferring
to while away their time in Mombasa, 13.4 per cent were on a business
trip while 5.3 per cent passed through Kenya to other destinations.
The remaining 9.4 per cent were Kenyans visiting relatives and foreign nationals visiting friends or for mission purposes.
The
cycle in Kenya’s tourim is seasonal with December having the highest
arrivals at 42.9 per cent followed by August (36.4) and July at 30.7 per
cent.
Interestingly, conference tourism has shown
resilience with 227 international conferences held in 2016 that were
attended by 101,600 delegates up from 218 meetings that attracted 71,620
people in 2015.
At the same time the domestic front
saw 532,600 delegates attend 3,755 conferences, being a 9.2 per cent
rise indicating the need to locally market existing tourism facilities
with conference halls and boardrooms for large groups of delegates.
Mr
Kaelo said experiences from their 155 members drawn from community,
group and private conservancies in 27 counties that manage 6.3 million
hectares showed that pasture management also helped ease pressure on
pastures as well as conflict among local communities as water and
pastures were available in abundance.
The members also
formulated a controlled formula where locally based management
committees arbitrated over arising issues over pastures as well as
investing tourism funds in community driven projects.
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