Daily Dispatch

Kenya's famed wildebeest migration without foreign tourists

- JACKSON NJEHIA

Normally, the magnificen­t plains of Kenya’s Maasai Mara National Reserve are crowded with internatio­nal tourists hoping to see a lion hunt during the annual wildebeest migration but this year COVID-19 means Kenyans had it all to themselves.

That’s good news for animal watchers but bad for conservati­onists who rely on the funds to pay for rangers and protection.

By June, Kenya had already lost 80 billion Kenyan shillings ($740 million)in tourism revenue, about half of last year’s total, due to the coronaviru­s crisis. This weekend, thousands of mostly Kenyan visitors travelled to the park to witness the migration. There were few foreigners - Kenya shut down internatio­nal flights in March and only resumed them on August 1.

“Once I came here, my thought and my view about everything has changed.

“I am actually embarrasse­d that I have not come here the 29 years I have been alive,” tourist Patience Mumo said.

So far Kenya has just over 26,000 confirmed cases of the disease and 420 deaths.

Tourist resorts are required to observe strict social distancing and hygiene measures but have been allowed to reopen.

“We are trying to revive the sector through the domestic tourism strategy. And that is why we ask Kenyans ... to support tourism,” Tourism and Wildlife Minister Najib Balala said. As part of that push, the government was using celebritie­s like Eliud Kipchoge, world marathon record holder, to showcase local attraction­s like the Mara.

“What has impressed me is the terrain, the environmen­t, the good air, the presence of animals,” Kipchoge told Reuters after having a jog with game rangers. —Reuters

We are trying to revive the sector through the domestic tourism strategy

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