West African tourist chiefs urged travelers on Wednesday not
to boycott their region because of the Ebola crisis, insisting that the
epidemic was only affecting three countries in a vast continent.
“Africa is not a country, Africa is a continent,” said Ola
Wright, the chief executive of West Africa Tourism, warning that fear over
Ebola in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone was having a damaging impact on neighboring
countries.
The deadly virus has brought an abrupt and indefinite halt
to international tourism in those three affected countries, where almost 5,000
people have died in the outbreak.
But tourism has been affected across the region and even in
east and southern Africa , which are thousands
of miles (kilometres) away and have not reported Ebola cases.
“We’ve had a lot of complaints from different people, from
hoteliers, tour operators, complaining that sales have really gone down and of
loads of different cancellations,” Wright told AFP at the World Travel Market
fair in London .
The fear is more damaging than the actual problem,” she said,
adding: “It’s just ignorance.”
Houma Dia, director of
marketing for Senegal ’s
tourism promotion agency, said that someone had come to her stand and
questioned her about whether she was tested for signs of Ebola on her arrival
in Britain .
“Can you imagine? I
was really shocked. Why did you come to ask me and why did you have this
reaction? I think people should stop panicking,” she said.
– Safari bookings down
–
Tour operators working
in West Africa were also at the London
event to launch a new campaign to support people of the region in their
response to Ebola.
“Unite4WestAfrica”
intends to raise money for charity and also promote a “positive story” of West Africa to help it attract tourists in the future.
Tourism in countries
such as Sierra Leone
was only really beginning to develop following the ravages of the country’s
civil war in the 1990s, and it has now been set back again.
““These countries were
just establishing themselves,” said David Oades, of Over landing West Africa .
He has cancelled this
season’s overland trips because of border closures but is hopeful they will
resume next year.
The effects of Ebola
are being felt even further a field.
More than half of
South African travel agents, tour operators, and car hire and conferencing
businesses say the Ebola outbreak has had a negative impact, according to the
latest Tourism Business Index published in October.
A survey by the website safaribookings.com of 500 safari tour operators
in September fo
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