The Minister of Information and
Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, on Tuesday said that the Federal
Government was irrevocably committed to the development of the
tourism sector.
The minister said this while speaking
at the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Nigeria Association of
Tour Operators (NATOP) in Lagos.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)
reports that the conference has: “Positioning Tourism Within
Nigerian Economic space”, as its theme.
He said the government was mustering
the right political will and taking some result-oriented steps to
develop and reposition the sector.
Mohammed described tourism as “the
oil that never dries”, saying that the government would harness the
potential of the sector to boost the revenue profit of the country.
“This government is committed to the
development of the tourism sector and we are mustering the political
will to reposition the sector.
“We recognise the potential of
tourism to propel the growth of the economy and we will do everything
possible to develop this sector and make it a major revenue earner
for the country,” he said.
The minister said that the government
was focusing on the development of domestic tourism while putting in
place the right infrastructure to attract foreign tourism.
He said domestic tourism was not fully
explored in view of its enormous potential to the economy of the
country.
Mohammed said that the government was
giving those areas like entertainment, fashion in which the country
had comparative advantage over some other countries, priority
attentions in its tourism development agenda.
The minister, while highlighting some
of the steps being taken by government to develop the sector, said
that the Presidential Council on Tourism was being revived.
He said the resuscitation of the
committee would engender the rapid development of the sector through
policy directions and other enablement.
He said the issuance of tourist visas
was being simplified and issuance time reduced to 48 hours to attract
foreign tourists.
The minister added that a committee to
implement the tourism roadmap had been set up and that a task force
on creative economy had been put in place.
Alhaji Lai Mohammed said the government
had designed a festival calendar for the country to stimulate
internal tourism and attract foreign tourists.
The minister, however, said the
government could not develop tourism alone.
He appealed for the partnership of
private sector and other stakeholders to develop the sector.
A former governor of Cross River
State,Dr Liyel Imoke, in his speech at the conference said the
state’s success story was a proof that tourism could be a big
mover of the economy.
He said with the right policy; vision,
infrastructure and attitude, the country could make tourism as its
major revenue earner.
Imoke , however, said that the greatest
problem hindering the development of the sector was the
misrepresentation of Nigeria by its citizens to the outside world.
He advised Nigerians to stop the
practice if tourism must grow.
“The greatest problem facing the
development of tourism in the country is what I call, ‘Naija
Bashing’
“ Nigerians running Nigeria down,
especially, some of our people abroad.
“This is not good for our tourism as
foreigners will have wrong perceptions about us. We need to believe
in the country for our tourism to grow.
“We need to speak well of the country
everywhere we go. It is when we stop writing those negative headlines
that the perception will change and people will visit our country,”
Imoke said.
He urged the country to focus more on
domestic tourism as a strategy to develop external tourism.
Imoke canvassed harmonisation of
festivals in the country to stimulate patronage and reduce confusion
associated with simultaneous holding of festivals.
Also speaking, the Director-General
Nigeria Tourism Development Corporation, Mr Folarin Coker, said the
agency was working hard to retain every dollar spent abroad on
tourism in Nigeria.
He said the agency was partnering with
stakeholders to promote domestic tourism; while developing the right
template for the attraction of foreign tourists
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