Category: Travels on Saturday

  • FTAN President, Adejuwon kick against Runsewe’s removal

    Reactions have continued to trail the removal of the former boss of the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC), Otunba Segun Runsewe.

    Among those who recently expressed their indignation were the President of the Federation of Tourism Associations of Nigeria (FTAN), Chief Samuel Alabi, and Dr. Franklin Adejuwon, former Chairman, Presidential Committee on Tourism Masterplan.

    Speaking on the issue, Alabi described the government’s action as a blow to the development of the tourism industry in the country.

    He said: “ I have to confirm that I am yet to be officially informed that there has been a change of barton. But be that as it may, I can say that I met Otunba Runsewe during the course of my assignment as FTAN president. I saw, from my interaction with him, a man that has zeal and passion for the development of the industry. It bothers on circumventing due process in governance in Nigeria. There is a term stipulated in the decree and that was not complied with. It is another blow to the development of industry. When a person is given a term of four years and that term is still subsisting…There was no probe, no panel and nothing is communicated to the public and suddenly the person is removed from office, it calls for questions.”

    He continued: “Runsewe transformed the NTDC from what we used to know it to a very visible corporation. In the past, many people would not be happy, if they were given the position of the NTDC Director-General, but now, that guy, whom I said I never knew before I became the President of the NTDC, did wonderfully well. I don’t treat people on the basis of how I know them, and I can say categorically that I have no direct dealing with Otunba Runsewe further than the FTAN-NTDC job.

    “I pray for the woman that is there now that God will give her the courage and strength to move tourism far above what she met. I can tell you that Nigerians are used to certain standards of activities in the NTDC. Anybody that will go there and try to go back to the pre-Runsewe era will not find it easy. Again, I have no apology to anybody. I am not a contractor; I am not a civil servant and equally, I don’t ask for money from anybody. I am just saying things the way they are.

    “I know wherever Otunba Runsewe finds himself , he will not fail because of the way he handles issues. This is my position on the matter.”

    Dr. Adejuwon said: “He kept on burning the candle at both ends to keep the industry alive. Why must he now be the scapegoat, while indolent people are left to perpetuate the uninnovative existence? Government is its own worst enemy. It has always created and demolished.”

  • Lagos Airport Hotel opens institute to the public

    Lagos Airport Hotel has opened its training school to the public. The institute, the Lagos Airport Hotel Hospitality Institute, which has been in existence since 1997 as the training arm of the Lagos Airport Hotel, has now been approved by the government to award certificates and diplomas to its graduates.

    Speaking during a training programme for 50 students that are being sponsored by the Lagos State government, the Controller of Training, Lagos Airport Hotel, Mrs Ebunoluwa Oyaleke, said the institute was currently training 50 students on different areas of hospitality management.

    According to her, the four-week intensive training on housekeeping management would allow participants have broad knowledge of what housekeeping and cleaning are. It will give the participants the skills needed so that at the end of the programme, they will not only be self-employed, they would be fit into any organisation that requires their skills.

    In the four-week programme, students would be taken through both practical and theoretical aspects of the training.

    The institute is now officially opened to outsiders who want to be trained in hospitality management, catering housekeeping, event management and other things.

    A participant at the training, Olukoga Oluwafunmilola, a professional caterer was full of praises for the Lagos State government and Airport Hotel for the quality of the training. She said the training had broadened her knowledge. According to her, “The training is good. With the knowledge I gathered here, I can start my own business that will help those who are jobless.”

    Orekoya Basirat, another participant, who is a banking and finance graduate, also applauded the training, describing it as interesting and total. Like Olukoga, she is thinking of establishing her own business after the training.

    The training was done by the Lagos State Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation in collaboration with the Lagos Airport Hotel Limited, Ikeja, Lagos.

     

  • Elina : Ghana castle where dark history comes to life

    Even today, it towers above its surroundings like a white beacon of hope. The scenery is beautiful, peaceful and serene with the huge structure framed by the surging ocean on one side and ringed by rows of tall coconut trees on the other.

    This cool ambience, though is deceptive, for in its heyday, this majestic building, the Elmina Castle, Elmina, Ghana, was the location of one of the most horrendous, horrible and brutal acts ever committed by man against his fellow human being. It was in this place that thousands of African slaves were kept in subhuman conditions, brutalized and eventually shipped to America, the Carribean and other far-flung parts of the world to work as slave labourers.

    “It is difficult for us today to imagine what these captives or slaves went through both while they were kept in this place and even before they arrived,” said Phillip, a guide at the castle.

    On this bright and sunny afternoon, he was taking a small group of foreign tourists, including this reporter, round the huge castle. He is very knowledgeable about its history, often giving graphic descriptions of life within its walls both for the captive slaves and the slave masters.

    It’s a tale of immense misery, pain and suffering beyond belief. Indeed, the contrast between the beautiful castle and the horrors that took place within its thick walls is just too hard to contemplate.

    A hellish life

    The castle was like a transit point for captives before they were to be transported to foreign lands. They were brought from all over the west coast, trekking barefoot all the way, sometimes about 300 miles from the places where they were captured to the coast.

    “The slaves walked from all over West Africa- from the present day Nigeria, Togo, Benin Republic, Ivory Coast, other parts of Ghana and other places. The journey could take months,” he explained.

    He noted that the captives, who were in chains, were given very little food and water and never bathed. Those who became very weak and sick, he added, were left in the forest to die or to be at the mercy of wild animals.

    “By the time they arrived the castle, they would have grown very weak, sick and exhausted. Many died in the process. Those that survived were kept in the dungeons inside the castle,” disclosed Phillip.

    There are several dungeons for male as well as female slaves in the castle. The main female dungeon is a long, narrow room. Apart from a little opening at the upper side of the wall, there are no windows. In this stuffy, airless enclosure were kept about 400 women slaves.

    Life in the dungeons was hellish. The captives were held in there for a maximum of one or two months, depending on the availability of ships to take them away. Given enough food and water to keep them barely alive, they were rarely brought out for exercise and sunlight, nor allowed to bathe.

    “In the case of the women who had their menstrual period, they were not given clothes or pads for the flow. So, they just did it there on the floor. Those who were too weak to ease themselves in the containers placed at corners of the dungeons as toilets were forced to do it on the floor,” said Phillip. Thus, the floor on which the captives slept was often filled with human waste, blood, urine and vomit. All this stench, coupled with the heat, made life harrowing and unbearable in the dungeons. “It’s no surprise that many of the captives died before they were transported abroad,” Phillip stated.

    As if the dehumanising conditions under which the captives lived was not bad enough, they had to contend with all forms of harassment from their captors. The female captors, for instance, were sexually abused by the slave masters.

    Hear Phillip: “Whenever the governor of the castle wanted a woman, he went about it this way. He would stand on the balcony overlooking the female dungeons and order the women to be brought out and assembled. He would then pick the woman he wanted.”

    The chosen female would be by this time, filthy looking and unkempt as she might have been in the dungeon for a month or so without a bath or other forms of personal hygiene.

    “Since she could not meet the governor in her condition, she was usually cleaned by the soldiers, dressed, fed and taken up a flight of stairs and through a trap door off the inner courtyard known as the private entrance to the governor’s bedroom,” said the guide.

    These regular sexual assaults by the captors resulted in pregnancies among some of the captives. Those who became pregnant were freed, but it was a bittersweet freedom as many could not make their way back to their places of origin.

    “Since the captives came not only from present-day Ghana, but also from Togo, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Benin and a host of other places, when these women were freed, they could not return to the villages where they originally came from,” Phillip explained.

    Some of the captors who had impregnated the women subsequently built houses in the village where some of them were kept to deliver their babies.

    Door of no return

    When the ships that would take the captives away arrived, those sold were taken to a room now known as the “room of no return”. A very low door leads to this room. Unless you are a dwarf, you will need to bend to enter. The captives, all in chains, were led to this room and made to exit through another door. From this door (known as the door of no return), they were taken down a ladder to canoes and finally the ships that would take them to unknown places in the world. This journey called the “middle passage” saw the captives being shipped across the mighty Atlantic Ocean to Europe, the Caribbean, the Americas and other places. It was a long tortuous journey in which many of the slaves died from hunger, disease and brutality and horrible conditions in which they were kept. Those who perished were thrown into the sea.

    “Over 60 million Africans were captured during the three centuries or so the evil trade in humans lasted. Only 20 million survived and ended up in foreign lands to work as slaves under terrible conditions,” stated Phillip.

    From one power to the other

    The castle, which was at the epicentre of the evil trade, began life innocently enough. Built by the Portuguese in1482, it was originally used as a trading post for goods. The Portuguese first arrived Elmina in 1471 and began to trade with the Africans. Back then, the system of trade was by barter, that is the exchange of goods for goods. The Portuguese exchanged items like guns, hard liquor, gunpowder, enamel bowls, tobacco, iron bars for such items like gold, ivory, spices and artifacts from the Africans. The locals had a lot of gold to exchange with the foreigners. This gave them the impression that the village was full of gold. Thus they called the place, “El Mina” (the mine). This name was corrupted to today’s Elmina.

    This mutual trade in goods continued till the early 16th century when the trans-Atlantic slave trade began. In 1637, the castle was taken over by the Dutch after a fierce battle. They held fort there, using it as a transit for shipment of slaves to the West until the British gained possession in 1872. By this time, the trade in slaves had mercifully been abolished.

    Today, the castle, with its different sections such as the courtyards, dungeons, cells, official quarters for the slavers, church, mess, kitchens and others, stands empty of both slave masters and ill-treated captives. All that remain within its thick walls are echoes of a past that saw the worst form of man’s inhumanity to man. Well- maintained by the Ghanaian government, it’s a magnet for tourists from all over the world. Briana Wilson, an African-American from Atlanta, Georgia, is one of them.

    “I had heard so much about this place that I just had to come here. This is my first visit to Africa. Seeing the place where my ancestors stayed before being taken away to other parts of the world gives one goose pimples. There are no words to describe the feeling. You can read all you want and watch all the documentaries you like about slavery. But they don’t give you the same experience as being there and seeing and feeling how those people must have suffered. It’s an unforgettable experience,” the 56 year old school teacher stated.

  • Youths must shun immorality —Runsewe

    The Director-General of the Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation has charged Nigerian youths to shun all forms of social vices capable of derailing their future as leaders of tomorrow.

    Otunba Olusegun Runsewe was speaking as one of the guests at a programme called “Shift” organized by the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) held at the Old Parade Ground in Abuja on a day workers across the world were marking the annual Workers’ Day which holds every May 1st.

    Speaking on the topic, “The Youth and Social Transformation”, Otunba Runsewe decried a trend where youths now embrace practices like homosexuality, drug abuse, indecent dressing, criminality, prostitution and other vices, warning that they were detrimental to the core of our moral value system and nation-building.

    Addressing the massive crowd populated by mostly youths, he observed that the Nigerian youth is drifting towards unhealthy alien practices like tattooing, sagging of trousers, putting on earrings and hair plaiting by male folks which, in his opinion, not only offend God, but are capable of jeopardizing the high moral standards that Africa is known for.

    He appealed to the youths to continually remain good ambassadors of the country by striving to portray a good image through high moral conduct admonishing that parents must also play a critical role in shaping the future of Nigeria by looking out for their wards always.

    Also speaking at the event, Professor Jerry Gana, a onetime Senator of the Federal Republic said the youths play an integral part in nation-building, citing Biblical examples such as Joshua, David, Samson and even our Lord Jesus Christ, noting they were all youths.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • ‘ Multiple taxation killing hospitality industry’

    The hospitality sub-sector is currently faced with an avalanche of taxes: Registration of Hospitality Premises, Stamp Duty, Nigerian Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSIT), Industrial Training Fund [ITF] National Pension Commission (PENCOM), Nigerian Tourism Development Corporation (NTDC), Value Added Tax (VAT), Pay As You Earn (PAYE), Company Income Tax, Withholding Tax, Liquor License, Food Handlers and Health Certificate; Others are Visual Advert, Waste Disposal, Bill Board, Sign Post, Operation Permit, Vehicle Emission Fee, Contravention Charges, Business Premises, Administrative Charges for Environmental, Audit, Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON), Water Supply, Electricity Supply, copious levies by the local government councils as well as other fees charged by regulatory agencies across the sectors at the state and federal levels has pushed the sector to the brink.

    The reality is that the current burden of taxes and levies is heavy, especially when situated within the context of the high operating cost for business. The sector wants to be very clear and certain of its tax obligations, the number of taxes, the rates, period of payment, mode of payment and so on.

    Enginner Onofiok Ekong, President, Hotel Owners Forum of Abuja (HOFA) said: “The local governments are the main culprits here

    “We crave for a tax regime that is fair and flexible enough to respond to changing circumstances; tax regime that takes into account the prevailing economic conditions and the harsh investment climate with attributes that could promote an investment friendly tax regime,” he said.

     

     

     

     

  • Epe day unites oloja, olu

    Epe is blessed with rich culture and alluring landscape, most especially overlooking town from the upland area, a little further from the waterfront. That might have informed the town’s history of past wars to wade off adventurist invaders.

    Two major festivals,Eebi Epe and Kayo Kayo, in the town signpost the rich culture. So, when the town sent out invitations that there was going to be a combined celebration of the Epe Day. It was not out of place to expect a display of rich and diverse culture that underlines the town’s history.

    For those interested in cultural tourism, the Epe Day offered ample opportunity to experience the people’s rich culture and to visit some of the notable tourist sites like their famous fish market.

    The day turned out to be unprecedented. One did not only experience the culture of the people, but became eyewitnesses to the history of the town.

    In the area of cultural display, there were no dull moments, as various cultural groups were on hand to perform. But the culture paled into insignificance when the town’s indigenes used the opportunity to open a new chapter in their history. By virtue of the events that took place on the last Epe Day, what used to be the biggest problem of the town might turn out to be its strongest asset, if the gains made on the last Epe Day were to consolidated.

    To understand Epe, one needs to understand certain peculiarities of the town. The indigenes of Epe are divided broadly into two: the Ijebu Epe and the Eko Epe. The Ijebu-Epe, according to the history of the town, were original inhabitants of the place before the Eko Epe people came to settle there when King Kosoko was dethroned as the King of Lagos in 1851 and he moved to Epe.

    But what the Epe people have decided to do, using the last Epe Day celebration was open a new chapter of peace and unity that would usher in positive developments to the old Epe Division.

    The event that sealed this historic occasion kicked off in the afternoon with different masquerade and traditional groups, performing and generally entertaining the huge gathering.

    The Ijinla Group, in their all-white outfits, came dancing round the arena and paying homage to top dignitaries that were at the event.

    The first monarch to arrive was the Olu of Epe kingdom, Oba Shefiu Olatuni Adewale. His entry was electrifying. A retinue of traditional dancers, horsemen and women accompanied him singing dancing and generally making merriment.

    Some minutes later, the Oloja of Epe, Oba Hamarudeen Ishola Animashaun, came also with the accompanying singing and rejoicing. He made his way towards the high table. As the Oloja danced towards the high table, the tension became even more palpable.

    He made his way to the Olu and suddenly smiles enveloped their faces as they embraced. The arena erupted in shout of appreciation and thanksgiving to God. To many indigenes, they watched the whole scenario with a certain air of disbelief. Many said they never believed such an epoch-making occasion would happen in their life time.

    This brought to an end the strained relationship between the Ijebu-Epe and the Eko-Epe people.

    Probably the happiest person that day was Otunba Teni Zacheus who was the chairman of the organizing committee of the Epe Day. He and some close friends in Epe midwived the peace truce that culminated in the united Epe Day celebration.

    He had this to say: “We have targeted this day and have worked towards achieving this goal: the unity of Epeland. History has brought us together collectively as a people. All that had gone on before now-bitterness, fractiousness, polarization and disputations-cannot detract from the fact that we are, to all intents and purposes, one. There have been a lot of intermarriages and other forms of socio-economic and cultural collaborations between us for generations that we are not practically intertwined.”

    He continued: “ As Epe citizens, let us forget our differences. Let us think about the future of our children and generations yet unborn, and let us work together, hand in hand, for our own common good.”

    The chairman of the occasion, former military governor of Osun State, General Leo Segun Ajiborisha, was passionate in his call that the Epe new-found unity should be sustained, saying it was the only way that development would spread to the whole of old Epe Division.

    He asked two rhetorical questions: “ Why do we discriminate against one another? Why do we fight against what has been divinely ordained by God and cannot be changed by any mortal till eternity?” He explained that no corporate organization would invest in an area that is bedevilled by strife.

    The Oloja also spoke in the same vein. He said: “Let me call on all the people of Epe, both indigenes and non-indigenes, to come together in unity, regardless of ethnic or religious affiliations. It is in unity that we can achieve the much-desired development for our town and local government area.”

    The Olu described the occasion as a milestone in the history of the town and advised the indigenes to “use this atmosphere of peace and unity to chart a new course for our land, so that we can properly harness the anticipated development coming to Epe, the proposed airport, seaport and many other developmental projects.”

    As a kind of endorsement of the peace, top sons and daughters of Epe were on hand to witness the epoch-making occasion. The included the Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly,Hon. Adeyemi Ikufiriji, the Lagos State Commisioner for Education, Mrs. Olayinka Oladunjoye, Chief Lanre Razak , retired Justice George Oguntade and other dignitaries.

  • Airlines are hurting our business, says NANTA

    The National Association of Nigerian Travel Agencies has decried the unfair treatment being meted out to them by airlines.

    According to the association’s national president, Alhaji Aminu Agoha, despite the huge amount money the NANTA is making for the airlines, S1.03bn, the airlines still go ahead to undercut the travel agency operators.

    He said: “Although NANTA enjoys a good relationship with some of the airlines, most of them are still operating in direct competition with travel agencies and all efforts to get them relocate their sales offices to the airports have proved abortive. Most of the airlines even sell tickets direct to corporate bodies which is a violation of the standard practice. All airlines on BSP should be compelled to close their city sales offices and move to the airports as it is the practice all over the world.

    “The airlines have continued to post cheaper fares on the internet than the ones on the travel agencies’ booking platform. This means that as the accredited agents of the airlines, our fares tend to be more expensive than those of the airlines. The airlines charge the Nigerian travellers taxes which have no basis. We appeal to this distinguished committee to compel the airlines to desist from these sharp practices.”

    He continued: “With a workforce of over 5000 Nigerians, the travel agencies account for 75 per cent of the capital sales revenue of about $1.5b for the year 2011. But regrettably enough, the major airlines do not pay our members commissions on tickets sales; rather they remit all the money to their home countries. This is capital flight and an attempt to kill the downstream sector of the aviation industry.

    “Most of the airlines do not give our members withholding tax receipts for taxes collected on their behalf. This is partly because most of them trade with the money instead of remitting it to the FIRS.

    “In order to force down prices in the interim, airlines should be compelled to immediately abolish the fuel tax surcharge and a technical committee set up by government to review the cost components of the airfares.”

  • Odun Aje: Celebrating Essence of Enterprise

    Odun Aje: Celebrating Essence of Enterprise

    The Onigbongbo,Maryland area of Lagos reverberated with the pulsating drumming, singing and dancing. It was the time for the celebration of Odun Aje, the seventh of the 17 festivals sponsored annually by the Otunba Gani Adams-led O’odua People’s Congress (OPC).

    According to the Yoruba tradition, the best day to go out in search of wealth is the first day of the working week. It was not by accident, therefore, that the organizers of the Odun Aje decided to stage the festival on a Monday.

    Within the last couple of years, one of the things the OPC, through the Olokun Foundation, has succeeded in digging deep into is the culture of Yoruba and trying to build on this and bring it to the consciousness of not just the Yoruba people, but the world at large.

    The air of festivity enveloped the whole area as both traditionalists and residents gathered for the festival in celebration of the efforts to acquire wealth that is built on hard work and observance of the societal ethos.

    It kicked off with music and merriment. Right from the palace of the traditional ruler of the town, Oba Nurudeen Olatunji Yussuf, there were some traditional drummers bedecked in native attire steadily beating about three huge drums, about three feet tall. A little farther , a musical band was also dishing out popular Yoruba tunes to the delight of guests and indigenes who danced to the music.

    The high point of the event was the wealth dance done to show affluence and attract greater blessings.

    The chief promoter of the festival, Otunba Gani Adams, talked about the need to continue to uphold the essence of the Yoruba culture and the significance of the festival.

    He said: “This festival has been helping us to revive our cultural philosophy about wealth. It emphasizes the importance of Monday, the Yoruba’s designated day for commercial engagements. Yoruba people value Monday because it signifies the beginning of weekly commercial activities and people do not offer any product without any payment on Monday. That is our philosophy, we must uphold it.

    “In upholding this indigenous concept, we can inculcate sanity and morality in ourselves. I will, therefore, centre my discussion with you today on a Yoruba ideology: ‘inu igbe laje wa’, which literally means that wealth often hides in the forest.

    “I just say that this event is planned to create moral habits in the society. A moral society will produce decent individuals, if it adopts the good values of its culture. Culture can foster a desire to acquire decent wealth. We cannot toy with this important aspect of life. Though we often use all of our festivals to rediscover our cultural values and heritage, we also use them to uphold our social development because the cultures of the world are extremely dynamic, and we must pass our own through the spectrum as others do.

    “Inu igbe laje calls our attention, therefore, to the neglected source of prudent and decent wealth in Nigeria. I am talking about agriculture. Without citing any figure, most Nigerians know the importance of agriculture to our economy and survival.

    “Agriculture is a viable means of engaging young people and able-bodied, and it is an alternative means of revenue generation for government. At least, about 10 million young people can get employment in agriculture, if it could be repositioned . We witnessed and benefitted from developmental legaqices that Chief Obafemi Awolowo and his lieutenants used the revenues from agriculture to create in the South West. No matter how rich any one may be, he or she cannot assemble money in a plate and eat. Farmers feed the rich and the poor; they support the economy of the nation. “

    Also, one of the guests, Mrs. Ekundayo Adele, a Brazilian Ifa worshipper, commended the efforts the organizers of the festival put in in promoting the culture of the Yoruba people. To her, a people that cannot uphold the essence of the culture and tradition faces cultural extinction.

  • FTAN, FCT hold investment forum

    The Federation of Tourism Associations of Nigeria [FTAN] in collaboration with the Federal Capital Development Administration [FCDA] has concluded arrangement to organise Nigeria’s first tourism investment forum.

    The event, slated for May 21 to 22 will hold at the prestigious Ladi Kwali Hall of Abuja Sheraton Hotel and Towers

    According to Chief Samuel Alabi, President of FTAN, the objective of the programme is to enable stakeholders discuss and address the issue of funding as vital element towards the development and maintenance of tourism products and destinations that can induce creation of new tourism frontiers by the creation of accessible funds.

    Other reasons put for forward by Alabi on the need for the forum are: to showcase the potential of the tourism sector to the economic development of Nigeria; to organize as well as to promote local tourism products and destinations to Nigerians before taking same to the international market and strengthen relationship between the tourism investors and their service/ product providers.

    The two- day event, which will comprise a seminar and exhibition, is expected to proffer a new direction for the tourism industry, most critically the much-talked about “Tourism Intervention Fund” which is yet to see the light of the day.

    Participants are expected from federal agencies, states, airlines, hotels, travel agents, tour operators, among others.

    FTAN president said necessary contacts are still being made within and outside the sector to ensure that the issue of intervention fund is given the deserved attention.

     

     

  • UNWTO/ATM ministers’ meeting holds in Dubai

    The development of tourism in the Middle East is the prime example of how tourism and aviation can act together as drivers of growth.

    With the region as a background, ministers of tourism and aviation leaders will gather at the UNWTO/ATM Ministerial Forum to set a common agenda for air transport and tourism that allows the industry to fully seize the opportunities of future tourism growth on May 7 during the Arabian Travel Market in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

    The extraordinary growth of international tourism over the six last decades – from 25 million tourists in 1950 to one billion in 2012 – is as much due to advances in air transport as to the rise of the middle class, the growing wealth in industrialized and emerging countries and the forces of globalization.

    Nonetheless, and in spite of the immense linkages between aviation and tourism, separate sectorial policies result in a fundamental, and too often even conflicting, disconnect which constitutes a severe constraint on the development of both sectors.

    The UNWTO/ATM Ministerial Forum on “Tourism and Aviation: Building a Common Agenda for Growth” held under the patronage of H.H. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, UAE Vice President, Prime Minister and ruler of Dubai, on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Arabian Travel Market, will bring together ministers of tourism and leaders from the aviation industry to discuss how aviation and tourism policies can come closer to set a common agenda for connectivity, economic growth and sustainable development.

    Speakers include H.R.H. Prince Sultan bin Salman bin Abdulaziz, President of the Saudi Commission for Tourism and Antiquities, H.E. Mrs. Reem Al Hashemi, Minister of State and Managing Director of the Higher Committee on International EXPO Dubai 2020, H.E. Mr. Hisham Zaazou, Minister of Tourism of Egypt, H.E. Mr. Alain Saint-Ange, Minister of Tourism and Culture of the Seychelles, H.E. Mr. Jamel Garma, Minister of Tourism of Tunisia and H.E. Mr. Issa Mohammed Al Mohannadi, Chairman of the Qatar Tourism Authority.

    The role of air transport is central to the future development of tourism and its contribution to the economy. UNWTO forecasts international tourists to reach 1.8 billion by 2030, 52% of which will arrive to the visited destinations by air and issues such as taxation, regulation, visa facilitation or climate change require a strong aviation and tourism agenda.

    With the Middle East as a backdrop, the UNWTO/ATM Ministerial Forum will focus on how to remove current obstacles to the growth of aviation and tourism, how to align transport and tourism policies and how to promote connectivity between the Middle East and other world regions.

    The conclusions of the meeting will serve as a basis for a broader global debate on aviation and tourism during the World Travel Market UNWTO Ministers Summit in London in November 2013.