NAIROBI,
Kenya, Jan 16 – Kenya and Tanzania are in three weeks time expected to
find an amicable solution to allow tour vans from the neighbouring
country drop and pick up tourists at Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport (JKIA).
The announcement was made after a closed-door meeting on Friday
between the visiting Tanzania’s Natural Resources and Tourism Minister
Lazaro Nyalandu and Kenya’s Tourism Cabinet Secretary Phyllis Kandie.
“Three weeks from today, a bilateral meeting will take place; it will
be comprehensive, and it will discuss all the issues that we may have
bilaterally so that we can facilitate the private sector to grow tourism
between the two countries,” Kandie said at a media briefing after the
meeting.
On December 22 last year, Kenyan authorities put a ban on
Tanzanian-registered vehicles from dropping off or picking up passengers
at JKIA. This followed claims that Tanzania had continued to deny
Kenyan-registered vans to take tourists directly to Tanzania airports
and national parks.
“We are not competitors and if there are any issues that are
outstanding between our ministries we should meet and discuss to iron
out those issues. And that is why Mr Nyalandu has come to visit us in
Kenya so that we can discuss issues of mutual benefits,” Kandie added.
The CS says in the meantime, Kenya will facilitate transport to and
from JKIA, indicating that it is still not ready to lift the ban for
Tanzania to access the airport.
“We have also agreed that in order not to disrupt and inconvenience
tourists, Kenya will help in the transfer of tourists within those three
weeks,” she said adding that this will be through partnership with
local transporters.
In March last year the two East African States reverted to their 1985
bilateral agreement as an interim measure to resolve their differences
in efforts to protect the multi-million-dollar tourism industry.
Under the agreement tour vans from Kenya are only allowed to drop
tourists at designated towns in Tanzania and vice versa as opposed to
leaving them at the border points or going to undesignated areas in
either of the countries.
But Tanzania’s Tourism Minister says he is optimistic that a solution
will be found considering the good relations Kenya has had with
Tanzania.
“I think it is important that we continue with this tradition of
making sure that we leave behind our fears, so that we can be driven
with what is constructive and what can be of mutual benefit to our
people,” Nyalandu said during the media briefing.
It is estimated that nearly 40 percent of about one million tourists
visiting Tanzania annually pass through JKIA before crossing overland
into the Tanzania national parks.
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