The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Turn townships into tourism hubs

Tourism, as anyone must be aware, is the goose that lays the golden egg for any country so that nations that nurture lucrative tourist destinatio­ns reap handsomely for their economies to grow and remain buoyant.

- Stephen Mpofu Correspond­ent

WILDLIFE — probably Africa’s richest Godly endowment after minerals, and a tourism drawcard, especially with the continent’s elephant herd — has for many many years reeled under threat of decimation, even extinction, by poachers thanks to a lucrative illegal trade in ivory in China and elsewhere in East Asia.

However, internatio­nal wildlife experts say China’s recent decision to clamp down on illegal ivory trade has raised hope that at long last the jumbos that grace many a national park in Africa, to the joy of foreign tourists, bringing in much needed forex, may now be on the brink of a long lease of life from the poachers’ high powered weapons of destructio­n.

The obvious result of the clamp down on illegal ivory markets is a rich harvest of tourist revenue from the continent’s herd estimated at between 400 000 and 450 000 animals but with as many thousands of the jumbos being poached annually by foreigners working with paid local syndicates that have also been blamed for poisoning the elephants at watering points in Hwange National Park, among other losses Zimbabwe has suffered.

But any hope for the survival of the jumbos kindled by China’s move against illegal trade in ivory can for the moment be best described as only a ray of hope for two specific reasons, one of which is that regional illegal ivory markets continue to thrive in Asia, appetising poachers and ivory dealers on the African continent to continue on the rampage against their natural, national resource, regardless of the impoverish­ment such acts cause to their nations overall.

Secondly and because illegal ivory trading continues to thrive elsewhere, internatio­nal wildlife experts point to the continuing existence of what they term illegal ivory markets in countries that include Angola, Nigeria, Egypt and the Sudan.

The experts also point to the recent murder in Kenya of a man who had been working relentless­ly against the illegal traffickin­g of ivory from Africa to markets outside the continent and with the United States of America also being linked to some of the illicit ivory trade.

The smugglers may now be celebratin­g the removal of a bottleneck in the illegal trade, so that African countries should not lower their guard, but must instead continue the fight against poachers with every possible means to save the jumbos that have so far survived the slaughter.

The wildlife experts’ concerns appear to suggest that regional organisati­ons such as SADC in our region, and others elsewhere on the continent and especially the African Union as the continenta­l body, might wish to move with speed to put pressure on national government­s where the illegal ivory trade continues to thrive to deal ruthlessly with the criminals or else risk being considered complicit in the decimation of the continent’s priceless wildlife endowment from God.

A carrot-and-stick approach to the problem of illegal ivory trading will appear to this pen to have a chance of moving mountains in this case.

This will obviously preserve their own as well as the continent’s elephant population for the benefit of Africa’s future generation.

In fact, a continenta­l Command Wildlife programme might do wonders in preserving any endangered animal species in Africa, especially if the policing of national parks is also intensifie­d to shut any loophole for poachers to access the game, and with tight controls at both airports and seaports to ensure that no contraband is blued out of the continent to hungry markets abroad.

National government­s must surely regard themselves as custodians of their country’s diverse wildlife resources for future generation­s; otherwise government­s that pander to evil desires, or corruption, as do poachers and other illegal dealers in resources that ought to benefit the whole nation are not fit to remain in power or access it in the first place.

Tourism, as anyone must be aware, is the goose that lays the golden egg for any country so that nations that nurture lucrative tourist destinatio­ns reap handsomely for their economies to grow and remain buoyant.

In this regard, it is probably time that the gurus of Zimbabwe’s tourism industry came up with new ideas to provide foreign tourists with new, attractive spots to visit and carry back to their native countries rich memories of what Zimbabwe was before colonialis­m and what it is like today.

This brings to this pen many commendabl­e initiative­s by some Zimbabwean­s in Harare to give the foreign visitor a true picture of what this country was before independen­ce juxtaposed with what the country’s modern tourism face looks like.

Mbare is being turned through township tours into a mirror as it were of what that suburb in the capital city, Harare, was like long, long before this country’s independen­ce in 1980.

Establishe­d in 1907, Mbare was the oldest township housing African migrant workers from Nyasaland or present day Malawi; Northern Rhodesia (Zambia); and those from the Mozambique, known then as Portuguese East Africa.

As such, Mbare became a melting pot of the cultures of the various African people settled in the suburb and township tours now being conducted to that suburb expose to the visitor a rich cultural heritage of the people living in Mbare and of the various trades conducted in the suburb’s environs with Mbare Musika as the hub of the economy of the residents there as well as of others benefiting from the trade in various commoditie­s at that market.

Africa Unity Square in the heart of the Harare central business district is another historical place for the foreign tourists not to miss.

For it was in that unique spot in Zimbabwe’s capital with Jacaranda trees in full bloom in summer where the colonial Union Jack flag fluttered for the foreign visitor’s attention, before uhuru came to Zimbabwe in 1980.

But rather tragically, or so this pen thinks, the township of Makokoba in Bulawayo, reportedly establishe­d in 1894, and obviously rich in its own cultural heritage, is not as yet being spotlighte­d to the foreign tourist as Mbare in the capital is.

Yet kwa Bulawayo is touted by everyone as the City of Kings and Queens.

Many Zimbabwean­s who work and live permanentl­y in Bulawayo have not even an inkling of where exactly and how King Mzilikazi or King Lobengula lived during their times. Full article on www.herald. co.zw

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe