The role of tourism in fighting poverty and
building peace was the key focus of the First World Conference on
Tourism for Development in Beijing.
Opening the conference, Premier Li Keqiang
underlined the role of tourism in lifting people out of poverty
and the importance of stepping up international cooperation in
tourism.
The event, held 18-21 May and organized by
UNWTO and the Government of the People’s Republic of China,
attracted 1,000 participants from over 100 countries.
Premier Li Keqiang emphasized tourism’s capacity
to stimulate economic growth, create jobs and foster inclusive
development.
“The global economy is lacking in growing momentum
and needs a new driving force. As one of the fastest-growing and
most resilient industrial sectors, tourism plays an important role
in boosting world economic recovery,” he said.
Addressing the conference the President of
Mozambique, Filipe Jacinto Nyussi, emphasized that inclusion
through tourism requires investment in education and capacity
building.
The links between development and peace were
stressed by UNWTO Secretary-General, Taleb Rifai, who said: “There
can be no development without peace and no peace without
development.”
In a message delivered to the conference by the
UN Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs, Mr Wu
Hongbo, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said, “When
tourism is well-managed, it has tremendous capacity to create
decent jobs, provide opportunities for inclusion and education,
and contribute to preserving cultural heritage and the
environment.”
The conference included three main panel
sessions dedicated to the contribution of tourism to the
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), to poverty alleviation and
to peace.
During the summit session, moderated by CNN’s
Richard Quest, participants called for an integrated approach to
tourism development that can contribute effectively to the SDGs.
Issues discussed included effective resource management, the role
of the private sector and the need for the SDGs to be understood
by all - citizens, policy makers, and the business community.
Participants in the session on tourism and
poverty underlined that there is a lack of understanding and
research on the impact of the sector on poverty levels. They
called for better monitoring, measuring and communication through
both solid indicators and people-centered stories.
The third session of the conference, dedicated
to tourism and peace, stressed how people-to-people diplomacy is
inherent to tourism while calling for investment in education and
youth to build more stable societies.
The full list of speakers included: the
Vice-Presidents of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mauritius and
Vanuatu, the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Economic
and Social Affairs Wu Hongbo, representing the UN
Secretary-General, ministers and high-level tourism officials from
Argentina, Bahrain, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Czech Republic, Ethiopia,
Germany, Georgia, Indonesia, Iran, Jordan, Kenya, Lithuania,
Malta, Malaysia, Mauritius, Mexico, Republic of Korea, Saudi
Arabia, Slovenia, Sri Lanka, South Africa, UK, USA, Vanuatu and
Zimbabwe, and SDG Advocate Ambassador Dho Young-Shim, as well as
representatives of the World Bank, the Japan International
Cooperation Agency (JAICA), the World Tourism Cities Federation,
the Petra National Trust Fund, the Beijing Municipality, Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region, and Guizhou Province.
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