President Museveni has
attacked Uganda Tourism Board (UTB) and the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) for
failing to effectively market Uganda abroad, saying it has become a major hindrance
to the country’s tourism.
Mr. Musevenni, while
speaking at the Presidential initiative on Tourism at State House Entebbe on
Wednesday 25th 2012 said UTB promotes specific animals like MountainGorillas leaving the beauty in parks.
“Some of these people
do not put thinking in what they do. Promoting mountain Gorillas is good but
what about the National Parks that show Uganda’s uniqueness?” he asked. He
added: “Tourists would go to Kenya and Tanzania to see the Lions and buffaloes and
only come here for mountain Gorillas.”
The president called
the General Manager of UTB, Mr. Cuthbert Baguma, to explain why they only have
promotions of mountain Gorillas but he was speechless.
Drawing
Board
Mrt Museveni argued the board to back to the drawing
board and rethink marketing strategies that bring out Uganda’s uniqueness to
tap in the tourism revenue like other countries.
“I think we are just sleeping and UTB is the
sleepiest of all,” he said. The president lashed out at UWA for being ruthless while
evicting people from National Parks.
He said people should be told that the revenue from
tourism is better than that from farming and link them to park hotels to buy
their crafts instead of ordering them off park land like they have no stake inUganda.
“I need to see those confused UWA people. Telling
people to vacate for better revenue does not need much thinking,” he said.
He urged UWA officials to design proper user-friendly methods of ordering people to leave national parks than using a
lot of force to evict them.
The Minister of Tourism, Prof. Ephraim Kamuntu, said
the sector has great potential for accelerating the transformation of Uganda
from a peasantry to a modern prosperous society that they should venture in.
effort to get responses from UWA and UTB were futile as the two executive
directors failed to pick Dailly Mornitor reported calls.
By: Bruce Amp