Capacity building for players in the tourism sector has been described as key to to the development of the sector.

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, stated this in Makurdi, Benue State, on Monday at the formal take-off of the North Central Zonal Headquarters of the Nigerian Institute for Hospitality and Tourism, NIHOTOUR.

He said, “Now, one of the prerequisites for tourism to develop and play its desired role in the socio-economic life of a nation is availability of well-trained personnel. This forms the basis for the Federal Government’s decision to have a specialized training institution for the hospitality and tourism industry in Nigeria, which culminated in the establishment of the National Institute for Hospitality and Tourism, NIHOTOUR.

“NIHOTOUR is a parastatal under the Federal Ministry of Information and Culture, and it is saddled with providing skills proficiency, technical upgrading programmes and professional knowledge-based education in the hospitality and tourism industry in Nigeria and West Africa.”

The minister said that tourism has now become a major catalyst for economic growth and social well-being of the citizenry in most countries around the world, especially the developing countries.

L-R: Benue State Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, Mrs. Ngunan Addingi; Benue State Deputy Governor, Mr. Benson Abounu; Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed and the Director General of the National Institute for Hospitality and Tourism (NIHOTOUR), Alhaji Nura Kangiwa, during the official take-off of the North Central Zonal Office of NIHOTOUR in Makurdi on Monday.

According to Mohammed, the travel, hospitality, tourism and other related services have over 1 million private establishments employing over 9.8 million persons in the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory, FCT.

He said that the hospitality industry in Nigeria contributed about 4.8 per cent to Nigeria’s total national gross domestic product, GDP, and utilized about 1.6 per cent of Nigerians in 2016, adding that  according to PricewaterhouseCooper’s 2019 hospitality report, the Nigerian hospitality industry was expected to grow by 12 per cent yearly till 2023, making it one of the fastest growing markets, before the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Insisting that the Federal Government has been doing a lot to alleviate the impact of the pandemic, especially as it affects the creative and tourism sector, through its N75 billion Survival Fund for Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises, where the Federal Government has paid 2,186 to companies employing 12,117 individuals, under the payroll support, as part of the efforts to cushion the effects of the pandemic, Alhaji Mohammed thanked the Benue State governor, Mr. Samuel Ortom, for building and donating the edifice to NIHOTOUR and described the gesture as a giant stride in the development of tourism in the state and the country in general.

He said, “Your Excellency, I want to thank you most sincerely for promise made and promise kept. The donation of this magnificent edifice shows your commitment to the growth of the hospitality and tourism sector in Benue State and, by extension, improvement in the quality of service delivery by the personnel that run the sector. You have indeed taken a giant stride in this Sector, and we are most grateful to you.”

Earlier, Governor Ortom, accompanied by the Deputy Governor, Mr. Benson Abounu, and the Commissioner for Information, Culture and Tourism, Mrs. Ngunan Addingi, conducted the minister and the Director General of NIHOTOUR, Alhaji Nura Kangiwa, round the institute, which will be offering Certificate, Basic Advanced Certificate, Diploma, Professional Certificate and Post-Graduate Diploma in various fields in tourism and hospitality.

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