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ECOWAS bloc now emerging preferred tourist destination —Stakeholders

Democracy in Nigeria is democracy for sub-region, continent…..President ECOWAS Commission 

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Anthony Elumelu, Ag. Director, Private Sector Investment, Anthony Elumelu, Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), says the bloc is now an emerging preferred tourist destination.

Elumelu stated this in an interview with newsmen after a strategic meeting between ECOWAS officials and private sector tourism stakeholders, in Abuja.

The high level dialogue culminated in the signing of agreements to implement a comprehensive regional tourism framework and issuing of a communique to that effect.

Elumelu said with the consensus reached between both sides, it created an enabling environment for Member States to implement a robust tourism confederation across West Africa, which would attract tourists globally.

“It is very important for you to know that from the ECOWAS perspective, I mean the Commission, our job is to create an enabling environment for Member States to churn out legal instruments, adopt them and also implement.

“There are assignments for the ECOWAS Commission; there are also assignments for Member States. They need to take ownership, they need to sensitize through advocacy, capacity building and also funding by the private sector, and on the side of the government, tax moratorium, power supply.

“These are all the things that we’re here to talk about. And I think we’ve achieved a level of consensus. We have an association now that will drive this and also key into what they call ECOWAS Business Council. So with these I think we are moving forward as a tourist destination.

“Tourism is not an internal matter. You need global attraction to have ECOWAS as a tourist destination country. So these are the things and I’m positive that in the next few years we’ll be talking about a robust regional tourism sector,” he said.

Elumelu described ECOWAS as a “partial severance of sovereignty into a collective basket,” stressing that most Member States were dependent on tourism, which is capital intensive and high income earner.

“The beauty of it again is that it’s important for you to note that there’s the enabling text, even the flagship protocol, which also creates room for tourism to thrive, the protocol of free movement of persons, which also gives you the right to stay, enter, stay and establish businesses.

“And you recall that we have signed into the continental free trade.

” Tourism is a key element in terms of that because it’s one of the highest earners. I think, like I just mentioned, if we implement the text that we have signed, and with this association now there will be coherence, and let us be positive,” he said.

Also speaking, ECOWAS Programme Officer for Tourism, Stella Drabo, noted that security was key for tourism to thrive, stressing that people moved a lot when they felt safe and secure.

She said that West Africa’s security challenges occasioned by terrorism and violent extremism was not a hindrance to tourism because in many parts of the world, where tourism was thriving, they were experiencing worse security issues.

“You know, if we go through the report that has been published by the World Tourism Organisation about tourism and security all over the world, they made a very, very detailed research. We are safe to move and travel, we are visiting each other.

“For sure, we have to continue improving on the security level, and in terms of infrastructures as well, having good roads to allow me to drive my family car from Lagos to Cotonou, from Cotonou to Niamey, from Niamey to Ouagadougou, from Ouagadougou to Cote D’Ivoire and to Monrovia, Liberia.

“And today it’s something we are very proud of as ECOWAS Commission, because we can now say ECOWAS is now a tourist destination because we have the private sector, we have the regional body, ECOWAS, with our private sector being the ones operating on ground.

“We have everything in place. So, now the train is complete. We will now double and even triple the horsepower to go further and further,” Drabo said.

President, Federation of Tourism Associations of Nigeria (FTAN), Nkereuwem Onung, also expressed belief that ECOWAS was emerging as a tourist haven with the tourism private sector agreeing to work with the Commission to implement regional tourism policies.

He said that people would henceforth be able to have multi destinations in terms of tourism with ECOWAS increasingly becoming a tourist haven of sorts.

“The major takeout from this meeting is the agreement between the private sector and ECOWAS, the confederation, to work together, first of all, to implement tourism policies across the West African nations and also to establish certain kind of standards within our establishments in terms of tourism operations.

“Through the intervention of ECOWAS, we’ve been able to establish a proper framework for its operations and from now going forward, there will be the private sector working together with ECOWAS to make sure that arrivals into West Africa, tourism establishments, the business of tourism, investments, are enhanced.

“The beauty of all this is seamless travels across West Africa and what that does is that when the bottlenecks that are in between are removed, when the private sectors and the public sectors in member states are able to work together, it’s possible for us to have free trade, free tourism movement.

“That means you can visit both Lagos and Accra at the same time, for instance, without any hindrance, you know, that’s what this is all about,” he added.

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