The US State Department hosted a briefing for tourism ministers from WTO Member States, pledging its commitment to
sustainable tourism and offering assistance to the developing world.
The briefing was hosted in Washington DC on Monday, 18 October by John Turner, US Assistant Secretary of State for Oceans
and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs. It was attended by 15 tourism ministers or top-level officials from
Paraguay, Nicaragua, Jordan, Honduras, Lesotho, South Africa, Senegal, Nepal, Peru, Haiti, Mozambique, Andorra, South Korea,
Morocco, Kenya and the Dominican Republic.
"Tourism is fundamental for creating a constituency for conservation,"
said Mr. Turner, who went on to stress the importance of tourism in economic development.
Representatives of eight US assistance agencies outlined the programmes they have in place to provide international financing
or expertise in sustainable tourism development. Typical projects include national parks management, rural tourism
development, planning, infrastructure construction, and political risk insurance.
WTO Secretary-General Francesco Frangialli announced that 900 million international tourist arrivals are predicted by the year
2010 and said the WTO's focus between now and then would be on protecting tourism resources from this onslaught, while at the
same time harnessing this phenomenal growth for international development.
Tourism ministers participating in the briefing expressed their concern over the damage that Travel Advisories issued by the
State Department can do to their tourism industry, and requested more communication with the issuing agency and more
frequent updates.
Members also urged the US officials to rejoin the World Tourism Organization. US Commerce Department representative
Douglas Baker said his department is "a strong supporter of the World Tourism Organization and its mission'', adding that the
issue was being discussed at the highest levels of the US administration.
The State Department briefing was held on the eve of a major tourism policy forum co-hosted by
the WTO and George Washington University on October 19 and 20. The forum will bring together developing countries and technical assistance donor agencies to
discuss practical cases of sustainable tourism development and seek new opportunities for cooperation in the future.
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