The Citizen (KZN)

SA Tourism Indaba looks to Africa

More exhibitors from Africa wanted

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THE South African Tourism Indaba should expand its platform by attracting even more exhibitors and buyers from the African continent, Tourism Minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk said yesterday.

“As part of our growth and expansion plans, we will be gradually increasing African participat­ion at the Indaba in 2014,” said Van Schalkwyk.

“We can do more to tangibly strengthen the African tourism industry through mutually beneficial ‘co-operation’ – which brings out the best in all of us through co-operation and healthy competitio­n on our continent,” he said.

Van Schalkwyk was speaking at the four-day trade event taking place in Durban. The event attracts nearly 13 000 delegates in the travel and tourism industry.

Van Schalkwyk said it was time Africans learnt from each other’s successes instead of resenting one another. “To achieve this we are willing to invest even more to transform Indaba into a pan-African trade platform.”

He said that in line with SA Tourism’s global strategy, it had identified key markets that could boost growth even more.

Van Schalkwyk said new SA Tourism offices would be opened in Brazil, Angola, Kenya and Nigeria. In the meantime, SA Tourism would intensify its marketing presence in South Korea, Russia, Scandinavi­a, China, Uganda, Ghana and Tanzania. SA Tourism would continue focusing on domestic tourism by addressing cost and informatio­n barriers. “We have to create the conditions that render the tourism experience and the treasures of our country accessible and affordable to a much greater share of our population.”

Van Schalkwyk said an audit of under-utilised state assets and properties that was recently commission­ed would reveal areas that could be transforme­d into tourist attraction­s. “We have also commission­ed a feasibilit­y study for a pilot budget resort chain, which could in some or other way be de-risked through partnershi­p approaches.”

This project was aimed at the market of would-be travellers earning less than R5 000 a month.

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