Game drive in Serengeti,Tanzania. |
Tanzania has however grabbed the chance, marketing itself in its neighbour’s strongholds as a safer destination.
Insiders say figures being compiled by the Kenya
Tourist Board (KTB) for 2013 and expected to be released in the coming
months “do not look good”.
They say the sector registered a poor performance
in the second half of last year compared with the first owing to fears
over the general election and rising insecurity. The trend would appear
to have spilled over to this year.
The officials are worried that the decline this
year might be bigger in percentage terms compared with the 2012 figures
if the challenges facing the sector are not addressed soon.
Data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics
(KNBS) show the number of tourist arrivals in 2012 declined by 2.3 per
cent to 1.23 million from 1.26 million the previous year.
In 2012, the sector raked in $1.11 billion, a two
per cent decline from the $1.12 billion the previous year. The officials
expect a reduction in earnings for 2013.
That will complicate the government’s efforts to
meet its rising recurrent and development expenditure as the national
debt rose to Ksh1.95 trillion ($22.5 billion) as at last July.
The International Monetary Fund has advised the
government to go slow on borrowing, warning that it will not only
destabilise the economy but also weaken the country’s international
status as an investment destination.
The taxman is eyeing Ksh920 billion ($10.6
million) in the current financial year (2013/2014) and, as at January,
Ksh427.1 billion ($4.9 million), or 53 per cent of the target, was in
the bag
Tourism is one of the flagship sectors in the
Vision 2030 blueprint which aims to transform Kenya to a middle-income
economy in the next 16 years.
But the sector has seen tough times since the
Kenyan military took the war on terror to the Al-Shabaab’s doorstep in
Somalia. The militants have upped revenge attacks in areas frequented by
tourists in Kenya, denting the country’s image as an international
tourist destination.
“Attacks in Mombasa will, of course, have an
impact on tourism given the coastal region is our tourism hot spot at
the moment,” said Muriithi Ndegwa, the KTB managing director, following a
gun attack on a church in the coastal city recently. “Although we are
not in a position to quantify the cancellations by tourists, industry
players have expressed fears of a possible drop in visitors.”
The Likoni attack came days after security
officers in Mombasa seized a vehicle laden with explosives capable of
bringing down a skyscraper.
The terror attack on Westgate Mall in the capital Nairobi last
year, broadcast by international media, portrayed Kenya as an unsafe
destination, according to government officials and investors.
Targeted more visitors
The government had targeted higher visitor numbers
of about two million this year and a rise in revenue but it now
concedes difficulties in achieving the target at it grapples with rising
insecurity in tourism attractions, mainly in the Coast and Nairobi.
The protected areas have also recorded a rise in poaching cases, mainly of two of the “Big Five,” elephants and rhinos.
“The insecurity incidents will negatively
affect tourism performance as tourists perceive Kenya as an unsafe
destination,” said Tourism Cabinet Secretary Phyllis Kandie. “We are
carrying out a global campaign to keep the image positive.”
Investors are already calling for a review of the targets so as to present a realistic picture.
“The results this year might be worse than in
2013, even though we cannot say last year was any better,” said Kenya
Association of Hotelkeepers and Caterers (KAHC) national chairman,
Jaideep Vohra.
International arrivals for the first half of 2013
by air and sea closed at 495,978 compared with 564,261 in the same
period in 2012, a 12.1 per cent decline. Jomo Kenyatta International
Airport (JKIA) received 409,130 visitors, a 13.5 per cent decline from
473,231 in 2012, as Mombasa’s Moi International Airport received 86,530
visitors, 4.9 per cent down from 91,030 in 2012.
The only cruise ship last year docked in January with a paltry 318 visitors, compared with 1,057 just a month earlier.
The Kenyan coast commands more than 60 per cent of
the tourism sector with over 300 hotels, which have 30,000 beds, but
some hotels have begun laying off casual workers and are warning
permanent workers they might be next.
A spot check by The EastAfrican
established that hotels across the coastal strip are operating at an
average occupancy of 20 to 40 per cent, compared with 70 and 80 per cent
in the same period last year.
According to Mr Vohra, the sector has lost
millions of shillings worth of business at the Coast this year after
tourist bookings and international conferences were cancelled due to
security concerns. Some of the business was diverted to Tanzania, which
is gaining in both beach tourism and safaris.
KAHC says Zanzibar has become Kenya’s main
competitor in beach tourism due to its quality beaches and hotels and it
is also viewed as safer than Mombasa. Tanzania is also selling itself
as a safer safari destination compared with its neighbour.
Kenya Association of Tour Operators (KATO)
official Monika Solanki said the doubling of park fees by the Kenya
Wildlife Service (KWS) had scared away potential international tourists
into Tanzania.
— By Mathias Ringa, Scola Kamau and Adam Ihucha
SOURCE; The EastAfrican
SOURCE; The EastAfrican
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