Last year's winner was Zimbabwe, after it became the 'most
It's time
to brush up on your Amharic, the national language of Ethiopia, because
the African nation has been named as the World's Best Tourism
Destination for 2015.
It
was given the award by the the European Council on Tourism and Trade,
who praised its outstanding natural beauty, dramatic landscapes and
ancient culture.
Thirty-one countries were considered for the illustrious award this year, with Ethiopia coming top of the pile.
Ethiopia has nine UNESCO World Heritage sites, which were heralded by the commission.
Tourism
was defined as a tool for poverty eradication, for local community
development and for economic independence is a successful strategy.
Ethiopia's goal is to boost tourist revenues to $3 billion this year - in 2013 revenues from tourism were at $2 billion.
And,
if it achieves that, it will start challenging the dominance of
regional rivals on Africa's eastern seaboard, such as Kenya and
Tanzania.
But
instead of beach holidays and safaris, land-locked Ethiopia is
promoting its imperial past - the below ground 13th century churches of
Lalibela, hewn from solid rock, and the hill castles of Gondar - as well
as its mountainous and majestic topography.
Visitor
numbers have risen 12 percent a year in the past decade to reach
600,000 in 2014. The target at the end of this year is one million.
In
the capital of Addis Ababa, the transformation from the starvation
years and the 'Red Terror' purges of the 1970s and 1980s is plain to
see. Construction is booming and a metro opens next year, cutting
through the sprawling city -- the only such network in sub-Saharan
Africa.
The
commission praised the the excellent preservation of humanity landmarks
such as: ruins of the city of Aksum- the heart of ancient Ethiopia,
Fasil Ghebbi- the residence of the Ethiopian emperors during the 16th
and 17th century, Harar Jugol- 82 mosques, 102 shrines, and unique
interior design in the townhouses and Lalibela - holy site encompassing
11 medieval stone carved churches from the 13th century.
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