Spray from Victoria Falls hits the faces of tourists and
locals as they look down at Africa 's most
famous waterfall. The water acts as a wake-up call, but this spectacular sight
is no dream.
Located on the border of Zimbabwe
and Zambia ,
tourists from all over the world arrive to witness the natural wonder. In 2013
alone, over 1.8 million people came to Zimbabwe
on holiday according to the Zimbabwe Tourism Authority.
That number may sound impressive, but tourism authorities
say 2014 will be an even stronger year for the industry. "Zimbabwe is pumping when it comes to
tourism," says Barbara Murasiranwa from Zimbabwe 's Tourism Council.
"We've picked up, gotten back to... where we were in 1999, and we are even
surpassing the figures for 1999."
Murasiranwa has good reason to be optimistic -- the World Travel & Tourism Council expects tourism to
make more money for the country in 2014 than any other year in the past decade.
And recent figures also show hotels at Victoria
Falls are enjoying solid business -- occupancy rates in the area
reached 77.6% in August, up from 62.6% in the same period in 2013.
Troubled past
But the tourism industry has been through tough times after
its heyday in the 1990s.
"It was the land invasions and the violence and the bad
publicity that the country received," says Trevor Lane of the organization Friends of Victoria
Falls, explaining the industry's slump. "[Zimbabwe ] was perceived as a high
risk country after that and tourism virtually stopped overnight."
Shortly after the world welcomed in a new millennium, more
than 2,000 white owned farms, of five million hectares, were
targeted by the government for resettlement. While authorities insisted the
program was sustainable, some white farmers were subject to violence, and lost their property to emboldened groups
of black Zimbabweans.
Economic meltdown
Since then, members of the international community --
including the U.S. Treasury -- has imposed sanctions on Zimbabwe 's
president Robert Mugabe and his inner circle.
The chronic economic mismanagement that followed saw a
period of hyper-inflation, and citizens at some point had to pay 300 billion Zimbabwean dollars for a loaf of bread.
According to the World Bank, "Zimbabwe is in
debt distress as total external debt at the end of 2012 remains
high at 70% of GDP."
And these economic hardships hit the tourism sector hard.
While over 2.2 million tourists arrived in 1999, by 2005 that number was 1.5
million. The industry has seen a shaky recovery since then, but the hard times
are still fresh in the minds of hotel owners and tour operators.
"Tourism shrank massively," says Lane. "A lot
of people obviously folded, left town...the rest of us just managed to
survive....until [the] revival started again a couple of years ago."
Improving infrastructure
In a move to ensure the troubled days don't return,
Zimbabwean Minister of Tourism and Hospitality Industry, Walter Mzembi, has announced a $150 million plan to expand the airport at
Victoria Falls.
The project, which will be financed with a loan from China
EXIM Bank, is boosting confidence amongst local business owners.
"Currently, the...short runway limits us as to the
number of people that can come in on a flight," explains Jonathan Hudson,
the manager of Safari Lodge -- one of the biggest hotels in Victoria Falls . "The new 4 km (2.5 miles) runway,
the new terminal, which will be able to hold up to five wide bodied aircraft,
new carousels, increased immigration offices, is going to make a huge
difference to us...With this we can increase the number of seats coming into
Zimbabwe on a daily basis."
Looking ahead
But, as U.N. data shows tourist numbers worldwide grew by 5%
in the first eight months of 2014, renewed confidence in the Victoria
Falls region is palpable.
"I think Vic
Falls is on a
goldmine," says Karen Dewhurst from the cruise company Zambezi Explorer.
"It's a beautiful location, and people are beginning to hear about it, and
with Zimbabwe
being much safer...it'll definitely pick up."
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