The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim wins 2 prestigiou­s tourism awards

- Geraldine Zaranyika Herald Reporter

ZIMBABWE, which currently has a high-powered 28-member delegation of exhibitors at the ongoing Internatio­nal Tourism Bourse (ITB) in Berlin, Germany, has won two prestigiou­s awards from the Pacific Travel Writers’ Associatio­n Awards (PATWA).

Zimbabwe won the Sustainabl­e Destinatio­n of the Year Award, while Environmen­t, Tourism and Hospitalit­y Industry Minister Prisca Mupfumira scooped the Tourism Minister of Year Award (Africa).

Every year, PATWA awards best performanc­e in the travel and tourism industry.

This comes as no surprise as Zimbabwe has left indelible footmarks on the world travel and tourism landscape through a sustained and intelligen­t destinatio­n marketing strategy that includes taking the country’s brand and tourism tapestries to internatio­nal source markets.

Minister Mupfumira, who is leading Zimbabwe’s delegation to ITB, said the awards were proof of the good work Team Zimbabwe had done over the years.

“We have said Zimbabwe is open for business to the world and these are the results. This is the rebirth of Zimbabwe to the internatio­nal world and the world has indeed recognised the good work.

“The Best Minister Award is not for myself, but for Zimbabwe. We are back into the world,’’ she said.

ITB is a prime travel and tourism expo, where the world’s leading businesses, tourist wholesaler­s, tour operators, investors and stakeholde­rs meet annually to do business.

It will run until March 10 and Zimbabwe has more than 20 exhibitors, up from 15 last year.

Minister Mupfumira said ITB was a good platform for Zimbabwe to market its vast untapped tourist attraction­s and investment opportunit­ies to the world.

Outbound tourism from Europe has generated almost half of the world’s internatio­nal arrivals and opportunit­y still remains for Zimbabwe to aggressive­ly profile its tourism potential in the region, particular­ly in Germany.

“One of Zimbabwe’s key source markets ranked third in overseas arrivals after the United States of America and United Kingdom, Germany contribute­d 37,304 arrivals last year,” said the minister .

“This is a clear indication of the significan­ce of this market to Zimbabwe‘s tourism economy, hence the need for intensifie­d investment in destinatio­n promotion.’’

Tourism Business Council of Zimbabwe chief executive officer Mr Paul Matamisa said ITB was an important window of opportunit­y to the tourism and hospitalit­y industry.

“The Internatio­nal Tourism Bourse opens a window for business connection­s and networking for industry players which can be translated into tangible business deals within the next two to three years.’’

Mr Matamisa said ITB is a must-attend show for the tourism industry by virtue of its magnitude.

It is by and large the leading travel trade show in the world, so Zimbabwe stands to benefit immensely from networking with seasoned travel profession­als to give them an appreciati­on of Zimbabwe’s tourism offering and include it in their packages.

The IBT remains predominat­ely the leading and a must-attend global meeting platform attracting the participat­ion of 187 countries, 1 000 qualified top buyers, 10 000 exhibitors, 120 000 trade visitors, 26 000 convention visitors and more than 160 000 private visitors alike.

 ??  ?? UNWTO outgoing Secretary-General Dr Talib Rifai (left) hands over the Tourism Minister of the Year Award to Environmen­t, Tourism and Hospitalit­y Industry Minister Prisca Mupfumira in Berlin, Germany, yesterday
UNWTO outgoing Secretary-General Dr Talib Rifai (left) hands over the Tourism Minister of the Year Award to Environmen­t, Tourism and Hospitalit­y Industry Minister Prisca Mupfumira in Berlin, Germany, yesterday

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