Business a.m.

Cross River’s multi-billion-naira tourism estate in Calabar suffers huge vandalizat­ion

- Ben Eguzozie, in Calsbar

SUMMIT HILLS ESTATE, A FLAGSHIP tourism estate, which sits on a-500-hectare land within the Calabar metropolis, is at the verge of extinction if the ongoing massive vandalism and looting of items at the estate is not halted by the estate’s management headed by Bobby Ekpenyong.

Like some other previously booming tourism sites that have been neglected by the current Ben Ayade administra­tion, the Summit Hills, a supposed top-class internatio­nal conferenci­ng centre, is now a mere shadow of itself.

The estate is home to the exquisite 5,000-seat capacity Calabar Internatio­nal Convention Centre (CICC); an 18-hole Calabar Golf Course, 100-bed specialist hospital and elite residentia­l area.

At full operation, the multi-service facility, inputted at multi-billion-naira commercial environmen­t, is capable of generating 20 to 30 percent of the state’s annual revenue.

In the running fiscal year, Ayade gave a curious state budget of N1.043 trillion for a state that picks up far less than N5 billion from federation account allocation (FAAC).

Ekpenyong the Summit Hill Estate managing director told Musa Kimo, the assistant inspector-general of police (AIG) in charge of Zone 6, Calabar that they were faced with a huge challenge of vandalizat­ion of the Summit Hill facilities.

“As we speak, the monorail is no longer working because the cables have been vandalized. Most of our equipment and facilities installed at the Convention Centre have been carted away by criminals,” he said.

“The governor (Ayade) directed that (our) foremost task was to revamp the entire security architectu­re of Summit Hills; and it struck me that there was no police presence within such a large estate. So, I found it necessary that we should have a police post situated within the estate,” Ekpenyong said.

“For me to achieve this vision at the Summit Hills Estate, I need the support of the police authoritie­s to ensure that the issue of insecurity is nipped in the bud,” he said.

Other hitherto top-class tourist sites in the state, which often posts as a service-driven economy, include: Obudu Cattle Ranch, the hilltop alluring facility where internatio­nal conference­s and daily visits have thinned out. It is on record that for more than four years, the Ayade administra­tion has not held the once internatio­nally popular Obudu Mountain Race, approved by the World Mountain Running Associatio­n (WMRA).

It was due to expected huge visitor traffic to the Obudu Ranch resort that kept the Bebi Airstrip at Obanliku Local Government Area eminently busy. The airstrip was built by former governor Donald Duke administra­tion, and subsequent­ly expanded and upgraded by the succeeding Liyel Imoke administra­tion. Today, services are at freezing mode, with visitor traffic uneconomic­ally low.

Curiously though, today, Ayade government is touting with the move of building another cargo airport at an appropriat­ed farming area of Obudu Local Government Area of the state. Site clearing of the place received humungous farmers’ fury months back.

 ??  ?? L–R: Nkiru Balonwu, managing partner, RDF, African Women on Board; Abimbola Ogunbanjo, president, Na- tional Council,The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE); HRM Nnaemeka Alfred Achebe, Obi of Onitsha; and Oscar N.Onyema, chief executive officer, NSE, at the global launch of African Women on Board (AWB) which held as a side event during the United Nations General Assembly Forum in New York, USA.
L–R: Nkiru Balonwu, managing partner, RDF, African Women on Board; Abimbola Ogunbanjo, president, Na- tional Council,The Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE); HRM Nnaemeka Alfred Achebe, Obi of Onitsha; and Oscar N.Onyema, chief executive officer, NSE, at the global launch of African Women on Board (AWB) which held as a side event during the United Nations General Assembly Forum in New York, USA.

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