Covid-19 deals blow to tourism

05 Apr, 2020 - 00:04 0 Views
Covid-19 deals blow to tourism

The Sunday Mail

Dumisani Nsingo
Senior Business Reporter

TOURISM and hospitality operators are in the process of quantifying projected losses due to the effects of the coronavirus (Covid-19) with a view to approaching Government for possible financial relief.

Employers’ Association of the Tourism and Safari Operators (EATSO) president Mr Clemence Mukwasi said the organisation is working on approaching Government with a consolidated position paper for financial relief for the industry as it forecasts revenue declines due to COVID-19 outbreak.

“We are working on a position paper (to send to Government for possible financial relief).

“I’m sure that after the (21 days) lock­down we should be able to put one in place. Individual companies have been approaching the Government separately at the moment. A consolidated approach is what we are advocating for,” he said.

The tourism sector is one of the country’s major foreign currency earners, generating over US$1 billion from 2,5 million tourist arrivals recorded in 2018, according to the Zimbabwe Tourism Authority.

The freezing of both international and domestic travel due to the outbreak of COVID-19 is expected to significantly impact on the tourism and hospitality industry.

Tourism operators, including hotels in the prime resort of Victoria Falls, have recorded an 80 percent cancellation in bookings leading to some of them shut­ting down. According to the Hospitality Association of Zimbabwe, it is anticipated the cancellations would reach 90 percent for the year.

Mr Mukwasi said it was going to take the industry a while to recover but could not be drawn to quantify the amount of loss stating that such statistics could only be quantified after the tourism sector’s peak period, which normally runs from June to October.

“When the coronavirus eventually clears, travel restrictions may take a bit of time to be removed until there is confidence in our source markets. It’s difficult to take a guess but a timeframe between September 2020 to July 2021 is not too far off the point. Full recovery may really be longer. We hope that the world economies will not go into recession after this pandemic,” he said.

Rainbow Tourism Group chief executive officer Mr Tendai Madziwanyika, said it was still early to give an assessment of the impact the pandemic has had or would have before the end of the year.

Further, players should thrive to come up with their own interventions to keep their businesses afloat than to rely on a Government bailout, he said.

“It’s really too early to say what will be the impact but instead of all of us lining up to Government with begging bowls, we need to say to ourselves, how do we individually play a role as companies to rebuild this economy. So, we would like to first of all see what has been the impact when all of it has gone and see if we can play a further role as a company or we need some form of assistance but we have to be responsible citizens,” he said.

Mr Madziwanyika expressed optimism that the tourism sector was likely to rebound when its peak season got underway.

“We are quite confident and positive, if you look at the fact that as with nor­mal trends our business starts peaking up around June. This is when international tourists travel because it will be their sum­mer . . . so between June to about Septem­ber-October we experience a spike in inter­national travel. If by God’s grace we are out of the woods, say by end of May, we believe there will be so much demand. Of course, there will be those that will still be fearful to travel . . . ,” he said.

Mr Madziwanyika added that with the water levels at the Zambezi River having significantly risen, subsequently increasing falls at the Victoria Falls, it was largely antic­ipated that the number of tourists flocking into the country would increase as well.

He hinted the need for the country to contain the number of COVID-19 cases for it to be an attractive destination for tourists.

“After this lockdown period, which is frankly quite global, we think there might be quite a lot of people who are itching to get away and say where can we go. Thank­fully our cases are still very low, that, we need to safeguard because if we can keep those cases low, it means Zimbabwe will become an attraction and on top of that, there is an amazing thing, which has hap­pened as we all know, the Victoria Falls is our number one attraction globally, one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World and we are experiencing record water vol­umes there,” he said.

“I think there is going to be a lot of demand after the aftermath of this ‘war’. There is going to be need for booking for conferencing by local institutions such as non-governmental organisations and regional bodies such as Comesa (Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa), SADC (Southern African Development Community) and the African Union. There is going to be a lot to take stock on what would have happened and how countries can build their economies.

“So, we are quite confident that following the end of this pandemic we may have a lot of tourists,” he said.

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