The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, on Wednesday inaugurated the Technical Committee on the Review of Nigeria’s Tourism Master Plan.
He challenged members of the committee to articulate realistic policies that would drive tourism from the periphery to the mainstream of the economy.
Members of the committee include representatives from the federal ministries of Information and Culture, Interior, Budget and National Planning, National Institute for Hospitality and Tourism, as well as the National Association of Nigeria’s Travel Agencies.
Speaking at the inauguration in Abuja, the minister said even though the tourism master plan was designed in 2006, a plan of action to implement it was abandoned half way hence the need for members of the committee to review the plan in consonance with contemporary challenges and realities and the peculiarities of Nigeria.
“This team is to review our own tourism master plan and see which aspect of that master plan needs to be reviewed in consonance with what has happened both in terms of technology, politics and even in terms of climate change.
“We are talking about reasonable and sustainable tourism because what we are offering to the world in terms of cultural and natural resources are also dependent on mother nature, and you must make sure that we do not expend it or expose it in a manner that children unborn will not have anything to show for it,” he said.
Mohammed said part of the drive of this administration to make tourism one of the pillars of the nation’s economy was the resuscitation of the Presidential Council on Tourism and the review of the master plan.
He said the Steering Committee on the PCT had already commenced the drafting of the council’s agenda, which would be handed over to the President.
The minister also disclosed the readiness of the United Nations World Tourism Organisation to assist Nigeria in the review of the master plan, having contributed immensely to the drafting of the initial plan.
He underscored the need to develop a synergy among all sectors of government, the private sector and the local community in order to have a multi-sectoral approach towards the development of tourism in Nigeria.
“The thing about tourism is that it’s probably the most inclusive of all endeavours in life,’’ he said.
Mohammed said, “In tourism, the Ministries of Agriculture Health, Power, Works and Housing and even Trade and Investment are all important and until we take this on board we will not be able to transit from being a country of huge tourism potential to a country whose economy will be driven by tourism and this is the beginning.”
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