Global Times - Weekend

Tanzania sets sights on E.Europe tourism market

- Xinhua

Tanzania is now focusing on Eastern Europe in its tourism marketing strategies after registerin­g success in Western Europe and North America, an official of the country’s Tourist Board said on Sunday.

Willy Lyimo, Tanzania Tourist Board (TTB) northern zone manager, said that the new market will complement the otherwise traditiona­l markets such as the US, UK, Germany, and France.

Lyimo who was speaking shortly after meeting a delegation of travel agencies from Eastern Europe highlighte­d the importance of the new market to the growth of the sector, noting that Tanzania stood to reap big from it.

“This is a unique opportunit­y to expand our base to emerging markets. There’s a lot of potential from countries like Bulgaria and the Czech Republic,” he explained.

The TTB official was also optimistic that the marketing of Tanzania’s natural resources on internatio­nal travel expos was now paying dividends following the desire expressed by the foreign travel agents of bringing tourists to the country.

Volodymyr Voloshyn, director of BCD travel from Ukraine, described Tanzania as a wellestabl­ished safari destinatio­n for many Ukrainians, and assured that his company would bring more tourists from the country.

“Tanzania is endowed with a pristine heritage coupled with an array of natural resources, it is the perfect gateway for tourists from Ukraine,” he said.

Buoyed by the direct flights from Ukraine’s capital Kiev to the spice island of Zanzibar, Voloshyn was convinced that such a trend would open up Tanzania to the rest of Eastern Europe.

Paul Fissoo, Tanzania’s Ngorongoro Conservati­on Area Authority (NCAA) manager for tourism services, expressed his optimism.

Fissoo said the authority will capitalize on the new market with a view of increasing the number of tourists who tour the Ngorongoro Conservati­on Area.

According to the 2017 Internatio­nal Visitors’ Exit Survey Draft Report released last week, internatio­nal tourist arrivals in Tanzania soared by 5.6 percent in 2017, raking in $2.3 billion.

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