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Tanzania joins hands with UNWTO to raise awareness that it is unacceptable for tourism
trade and the travelling public to tolerate children exploitation in all forms..Read More. |
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TANZANIA TOURIST ATTRACTIONS
Tanzania is one of the unique destinations on the African continent that has yet
to be discovered by many. It is a land of many wonders harboring an un-paralleled
diversity of fauna and flora. Kilimanjaro, the highest permanently snow-capped free
standing mountain in Africa, the exotic Islands of Zanzibar, the finest game sanctuaries
of Serengeti, Tarangire, Lake Manyara, Ngorongoro Crater, Ruaha, Selous and the
Marine Park of Mafia Island are only but a few of the living examples. The scenery,
topography and very friendly people make Tanzania one of the best places to visit
and promise the best wildlife photographic safaris on the continent. Tanzania indeed
has it all
Tanzania has 14 National Parks, 1 conservation area, 17 game reserves, and several
marine parks, a breathtaking coast and Lake Zone and gently undulating highlands
that are a hiker’s paradise.
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NATIONAL PARKS
Tanzanian National parks exist for the primary role of conservation of the great
wealth for present and future generation. These National Parks include the:
All of these form the core of a much larger protected ecosystem that has been set
aside to preserve the country’s rich natural heritage, and to provide secure breeding
grounds where the diverse fauna and flora available can thrive safe from the ever
increasing threat of human encroachment.
Tanzania has dedicated more than 42,000 square kilometers more than one third of
its territory- a uniquely high proportion of land to the formal protection of its
wildlife as National Parks and Game Reserves despite its growing population pressures.
The existing park system protects a number of internationally recognized bastions
of biodiversity and world heritage sites thereby redressing the balance of deforestation,
agriculture and urbanization that is threatening Tanzania’s remaining wilderness.
In this, Tanzania has successfully resisted the temptation to cash in on the short
term gains of mass tourism.
Human activity is closely monitored and all development strictly regulated. Building
in the parks is kept unobtrusive and waste disposal is carefully controlled. Park
visitors and facilities are widely distributed to prevent harassment of animals
and to minimize the human imprint on the environment.
Guardianship of this rich resource is solely reliant on the goodwill of the park’s
neighbors- the indigenous tribes of the different parts of Tanzania where the parks
are located.
The Tanzania National Parks Authority (TANAPA) is working hard to ensure that local
communities have a sense of ownership and a vested interest in the future of the
parks by sharing the rewards of conservation and delivering tangible benefits. A
percentage of park revenues is allotted to assist community development initiatives
such as the construction of schools, health dispensaries, water schemes and roads.
Villagers are encouraged to develop cultural tourism projects to cultivate their
own cultures and supplement their incomes.
Tanzania has set a benchmark of its responsibility- to its citizens, their offspring’s
and the world at large- in the conservation and management of a global resource.
In this, Tanzania remains committed to low impact, sustainable visitation to protect
the environment from irreversible damage while creating a first class ecotourism
destination.
By choosing to visit Tanzania either by merely browsing the net or by actually making
a trip to our beautiful land, you are supporting a developing country’s extraordinary
investment in the future.
Tanzania’s diverse attractions are of course bound by its people, who take justifiable
pride in their deeply ingrained national mood of tolerance and peacefulness. Indeed,
Tanzania, for all its ethnic diversity, is practically unique in Africa in having
navigated a succession of modern political hurdles – the transformation from colonial
dependency to independent nation, from socialist state to free-market economy, from
mono-partyism to fully-fledged democracy - without ever experiencing sustained civil
or ethnic unrest.
Tanzania has also, over the past 20 years, emerged from comparative obscurity to
stand as one of Africa’s most dynamic and popular travel destinations: a land whose
staggering natural variety is complemented by the innate hospitality of the people
who live there.
How to define the Tanzanian experience? Surprisingly easy, really. It can be encapsulated
in a single word, one that visitors will hear a dozen times daily, no matter where
they travel in Tanzania, or how they go about it: the smiling, heartfelt Swahili
greeting of “Karibu!” – Welcome!
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