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Tunisia tops Africa in Tourist And Travel Competitiveness

The 2007 Davos World Economic Forum Report ranks Tunisia first in Africa and second in the Arab World after Dubai , in terms of tourist and travel competitiveness. More than 6 million tourists visit Tunisia each year, making it one of the top Mediterranean destinations. The report, which is based on three main criteria: business environment, human and natural resources and the quality of political reforms undertaken, also writes that Tunisia ranks 34 th in the world insofar as its travel and tourist competitiveness are concerned. It comes ahead of Turkey (52 nd ), Thailand (43 rd ) and Morocco (57 th ). In recent years, Tunisia has taken a moderate, non-aligned stance in its foreign relations. Domestically, it has sought to diffuse rising pressure for a more open political society. Tunisian cuisine is very much in the Northern African Maghreb tradition, with couscous and tajine stews forming the backbone of most meals. It has been most popular for its health and spa resorts. So do plan your next trip to this beautiful country. Source: All Africa

African Safari Travel to market East Africa

These would include the nations of Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. The tourism industry here will have to rise up the stakes to fulfill the demands of this combined East African zone. African Safari Travel will have all the information to market these regions. Attractions, flights, hotels and East Africa Tour operators listings will appear. What wonders does this region hold? � Kenya is the crown safari destination of Africa due to its considerable land area of wildlife habitat, including the maasai mara, land of annual mass migrations of animals. � Tanzania is the land of Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa’s highest peak. It has Africa’s largest lake Lake Victoria and has the Serengeti plain which is also witness to mass migrations. � Uganda is home to the endangered mountain gorillas. This is trhe world’s hotspot for gorilla trekking. The three nations together make the right combination for the perfect African Safari. Source: Uganda Travel Guide

Reality tourism: Kenya’s Kibera slum Tours

Looking beyond its wild life and nature’s endowments there is much poverty and destitution in Africa. James Asudi, general manager of Kenyan-based Victoria Safaris has come up with a novel idea to show case the same; slum tours. One-day visitors tread the rubbish-strewn paths, sampling the sewage smell, and photographing the tin-roof shacks that house 800,000 of the nation’s poorest in Nairobi valley. Victoria Safaris’ manager Asudi, from the same Luo tribe which constitutes the majority of Kibera residents, insists the tour he offers of Kibera and other slums in Nairobi and Kisumu in west Kenya, are beneficial to locals.They raise awareness, and he hands his tourists back a percentage of their payment to donate to a cause they have seen on their walkabout, he says, such as a health or school project. Reviews like this one are most humiliating: Kibera is the rave spot in Kenya," wrote one columnist sarcastically. "For where else can one see it all in one simple stop? The AIDS victims dying slowly on a cold, cardboard bed. The breastless teenager. … Plastic-eating goats fighting small children … and – ah yes – the famous ‘shit-rolls-downhill-flying-toilets’. It is unbeatable This tourism is a talking point for the rich who boast of having gone to the poorest part of Africa, while for the poor it remains an embarrassment of their backwardness, filth, misery and absolute deprivation. Though the tourism might bring in awareness, put pressure on the government and others to help slum-dwellers, all the same it is an intrusion into their lives which can be understood only when experienced. Source: Sydney Morning Herald

New safety rules cause transportation crisis in Kenya

Passengers to and from Lamu Island were left cut off as the Government enforced the rule requiring all boats to have life jackets for safety purposes. The Kenya Ports Authority and the police enforced the order. Though they had been given a notice of the rule about two months ago, most of the boats had not complied with the life jackets order at the expiry of a notice issued. This meant good money for speed boats that had complied with the order. Some of the travellers who opted to make connection in Malindi and Mombasa paid Sh400 each for the trip. The trip normally costs only Sh100 while the other bigger boats charge even lesser at Sh50. Though buying the jackets must have been expensive for the boat owners since even the cheapest cost Sh2,500. probably the government should give them more time. Source: AllAfrica