Summary
· By
Bertha IsmailThe government has injected Sh7 billion into the project, which entails the restoration of four historical buildings
Arusha. Zanzibar has embarked on projects to restore historic
buildings in Stone Town in a move to boost cultural and historical tourism.
The chairperson of the Zanzibar
Association of Tourism Investors (ZATI), Rahim Bhaloo, said the government is
in the process of creating a different form of tourism in the archipelago to
make the Unguja and Pemba Islands stand out on the continent.
“We have entered into a contract
with private investors to restore and maintain ancient buildings in the old
Stone Town of Zanzibar, without altering their former designs and charm,” Balo
told The Citizen in Arusha yesterday at Zanzibar’s pavilion at the Kilifair
Travel and Tourism Trade Fair going on in Arusha.
Bhaloo quoted the United Nations
Economic Commission for Africa’s (UNECA) recent report that the tourism
industry in the Isles accounts for 30 percent of Zanzibar’s Gross Domestic
Product (GDP).
Speaking from Zanzibar, the Director
of the Department of Museum and Antiquities Zanzibar in the Ministry of Tourism
and Heritage, Maryam Mansab, said a total of 14 such properties are undergoing
restoration in the Isles.
“The government has injected Sh7
billion towards the project, which entails the restoration of four historical
buildings, while ten other properties will be rehabilitated by private sector
entities,” she explained.
Some of the special sites that are
being restored include ancient Persian spa baths, ‘Hamamnis’, the Palace
Museum, the Mnazi Mmoja Natural History Museum, the Peace Memorial, and the
Arts Museum.
Zanzibar will officially inaugurate
two of the museums in August 2023. There is also the Kibweni Palace Museum,
which is located some 6 kilometres from the stone town. Oman will restore Beit
Al Ajaib, which a historical monument is located on the shores of the Old Stone
Town in Unguja. Known as the ‘House of Wonders,’ the legendary building
partially collapsed in 2020.
The Zanzibar government is now
planning to restore the property to its original form and shape.
The tender for the restoration work
was awarded in the presence of Salem bin Muhammad Al Mahrouqi, the Oman
Minister of Heritage and Tourism.
The Department of Museum and
Antiquities of Zanzibar had collected revenue amounting to Sh350 million by
March 2023, which is 50 percent of the government’s target of collecting Sh700
million in the fiscal year 2022/2023 from cultural tourism activities.
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