Tourism Namibia
Tourism is becoming an increasingly important foreign exchange earner and job
provider for Namibia. Border crossing data obtained from the Ministry of Home
Affairs shows that the total foreign arrivals (including permanent residents and
day visitors) to Namibia rose from 693 777 in 1999 to 758 989 in the year 2000.
Namibia has a total of 26 parks and reserves, covering approximately 15% of the
total land area. In addition to the 12 government-owned rest camps in these
parks, managed by Namibia Wildlife Resorts (NWR), the tourism infrastructure
throughout the rest of the country is well developed. Hotels, pensions, guest
farms and rest camps are generally of a high standard and are managed on a
similar basis as tourist accommodation establishments in Europe. The Namibia
Tourism Board (NTB) controls the grading and standards of accommodation
establishments, safari companies and products offered by tour operators.
Tourism structures
In accordance with Government's White Paper on Tourism, rigid standards of
protection, conservation and control are practised to ensure sustainable
utilisation of Namibia's natural assets by the tourism industry. Future tourism
developments will be closely monitored with the emphasis on high-quality tourism
and carrying capacity. New resorts or expanded resorts will require registration
and endorsement by the Ministry of Environment and Tourism and the Namibia
Tourism Board.
The Federation of Namibian Tourism Associations (FENATA) acts as an umbrella
organisation for tourism associations in the private sector. As such it is the
voice of the tourism industry in Namibia, serving as a communication vehicle
between Government and its members. Tourism associations belonging to FENATA are
the Hospitality Association of Namibia (HAN), the Namibia Professional Hunters'
Association (NAPHA), the Association of Tour and Safari Operators (TASA), Air
Namibia, the official airline, the Car Rental Association of Namibia (CARAN),
the Namibia Community Based Tourism Association (NACOBTA), and the Tourist
Related Namibian Business Association (TRENBA). The Namibia Academy for Tourism
and Hospitality (NATH) offers training courses in tourism-related subjects
according to international standards.
Community-based tourism
NACOBTA (Namibia Community Based Tourism Association) is a Namibian NGO started
by community members to provide support to emerging community-based tourism
enterprises. The organisation has since become a key role-player in the national
CBNRM programme and tourism planning.
Regional tourism
For Southern Africa or the SADC Region, the expected tourism arrivals according
to the 2020 Vision of the World Tourism Organisation (WTO) are approximately
half those estimated for Africa. The growth rate for the SADC (South African
Development Community) Region estimated by the WTO for the next 20 years is
slightly better than that for the continent overall, namely a 7.5% growth per
annum compared to one of 5.5%.
On the initiative of the SADC Tourism Unit, the Regional Tourism Organisation of
Southern Africa, RETOSA, was formed in 1996. The mandate of its Executive
Director, Shepherd Nyaruwata, who operates from South Africa, is to market and
promote the region in close co-operation with the various national tourist
organisations and private sector, creating a solid destination identity.
While RETOSA's activities are funded mainly by the regional governments, the
intention is for the private sector to gradually take over this function. RETOSA
currently markets the region through tourism fairs such as the World Travel
Market in London and ITB in Berlin.
A tourism newsletter provides
tourism information on the region. A landmark development to promote regional
tourism was the acceptance of a Tourism Protocol for the SADC region by all
member countries. The aim of this protocol is the facilitation of travel to and
within the region and should contribute to making it a tourist-friendly
destination.
Tourist Information
The Namibia Tourism Board’s main objective is aggressive promotion of Namibia
worldwide. An Act of Parliament, Act 21 of 2000 with the following mandate,
formed the NTB in 2001.
To promote Namibia's tourism industry both internationally and locally;
To ensure that services rendered and facilities provided to tourists comply with
the prescribed standards;
To register and grade accommodation establishments, and other tourism-related
businesses;
To promote the training of persons engaged in the tourism industry;
To promote the development of environmentally sustainable tourism by actively
supporting the long-term conservation, maintenance and development of the
natural resources base of Namibia; and
To provide advice and guidance to persons engaged in the tourism industry.
The Tourism Board aids its function of information dissemination with materials
such as the Welcome To Namibia accommodation and information guide, a Namibia
tourist map, a Namibia tourism video and a variety of brochures and leaflets.
To promote tourism abroad, the NTB has four offices outside Namibia (Frankfurt
in Germany, London in the UK, Johannesburg and Cape Town in the RSA) as well as
two representatives situated in New York in the United States and Madrid in
Spain to provide tourism information on Namibia. These offices and
representatives also actively promote Namibia to the travel trade and at the
various travel fairs.
Namibia's tourism infrastructure is of a high standard. Hotels, pensions, guest
farms, lodges and rest camps are graded on a similar basis as tourist
accommodation establishments in Europe.
There are several tourism information outlets throughout the country. During
2000 the Tourist Information Office in Post Street Mall was reopened. The office
is managed and staffed by the Windhoek City Council and provides information to
members of the public on all aspects of tourism in Namibia. Tourist Junction in
Fidel Castro Street also provides information, as well as a reservations
facility, a luggage storage area for tourists, an Internet Cafe and a small
restaurant that provides light refreshments. Most of Namibia's towns have
tourist information centres. These are listed at the end of Namibia Holiday &
Travel's four tourist regions – Central, Namib, North and South.
Trans-Frontier Conservation Areas
The concept of Trans Frontier Conservation Areas (TFCAs, also referred to as
Peace Parks) is rapidly gaining momentum in SADC countries such as Namibia,
Angola, Mozambique, Botswana, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Zambia. TFCAs are
trans-frontier wildlife sanctuaries that embrace cross-border conservation areas
and game parks. The objective is for them to be managed by public and
private-sector partnerships backed by intergovernmental negotiations and funded
by global donor organisations.
The first TFCA in the region was the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, which
incorporates parks in Botswana and South Africa. This park is proving highly
successful in terms of bookings. The second one, the Gaza-Kruger-Gonarezhou
Trans-frontier Conservation Area, was formed between South Africa, Mozambique
and Zimbabwe during 2000. Two trans-frontier parks in which Namibia stands to
become involved in the near future are in the Caprivi area where four other
adjacent countries could be implicated, and the Huns Mountains/Fish
River/Richtersveld area with South Africa. An agreement between Namibia and
South Africa was signed during 2001 linking Namibia's 310 000-ha Ai-Ais Hot
Springs Game Park with the somewhat smaller Richtersveld National Park across
the Orange River.
Hunting & hunting safaris
One of the main attractions of hunting in Namibia for the international hunting
clientele is the high standard of ethics maintained by the Namibia Professional
Hunting Association (NAPHA). All hunting resorts under the strict supervision of
the Directorate of Resource Management of the MET. Hunting activities range from
trophy to safari hunts. Hunters are accommodated at lodges or guest farms that
cater for hunters only, or at guest farms offering hunting facilities as well as
a variety of other activities.
Contact &
information:
E-mail:
info@namibweb.com
Reservations are only accepted in writing: by fax or via e-mail.
Final availability confirmation: in writing: by fax or via e-mail.
Terms & conditions, Payment options and Cancellation policy
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