Poor marketing strategy and dilapidated access roads to major
game parks remain setbacks to Uganda’s quest to improve tourist numbers.
This
is despite government investing in big infrastructure projects like the
overhaul of the Entebbe International Airport and the Kampala-Entebbe
Express Way aimed at easing travel to the capital Kampala.
Another
project is the Busega-Mpigi Express Way, which lies within the Northern
Corridor —a regional transport route that connects Rwanda, Uganda and
South Sudan to Kenya’s Mombasa port, and also links tourists to Lake
Mburo National Park and Mgahinga National Park, which hosts Uganda’s
mountain gorillas.
Industry players are now raising questions over the country’s tourism marketing strategy.
“Most
tourists arrivals are from Austria, Germany, the Scandinavian region,
France and Belgium, with a few coming from the US and Britain. But the
government’s marketing strategy remains focused on Britain and the US,”
said Sam Mugenyi, the owner of Kibaale Guest Cottages in the Kibaale
Forest National Park.
READ: Uganda hoteliers plead for tax breaks
Mr Mugenyi also called on government to review the tax levied on tourist lodges in order to cut accommodation fees.
Mr Mugenyi also called on government to review the tax levied on tourist lodges in order to cut accommodation fees.
William
Lalobo, managing director of Heritage Safari Lodge located in Murchison
Falls National Park said access roads within the parks need to be
fixed.
Poaching and human wildlife conflict have also depleted the lion population.
Poaching and human wildlife conflict have also depleted the lion population.
The
public relations officer at Uganda Wildlife Authority Jossy Muhangi
said it had stepped up policing work and game meat market intelligence
gathering.
“The courts have also been supportive by
issuing heavy fines and sentences against wildlife offenders,” he said,
adding that the authority had introduced night game drives to enable
tourists to enjoy a glimpse of hunting lions.
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