Showing posts with label atm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label atm. Show all posts

Tuesday, 19 April 2016

QATAR: Qatar Airways Introduces New Standards At Arabian Travel Market 2016

Qatar Airways is preparing to bring its unique offering to the Arabian Travel Market (ATM), the Middle East’s leading travel trade fair taking place in Dubai from 25-28 April 2016. This year, Qatar Airways will showcase the award-winning service and hospitality that the airline is renowned for, making memorable experiences for passengers world-wide.

At its state-of-the-art exhibition stand, Qatar Airways will give visitors a premier experience in its A380 First Class cabin, which takes luxury travel to new heights. The cabin, featuring ultra-wide seats, privacy dividers and the flexibility to convert the space into a fully flat bed or extend a table to invite a guest to dine with them, provides travellers a haven of tranquillity and relaxation while cruising at Mach 0.85 for business or leisure.

Visitors can also get a feel for the luxuriously appointed Dubai Premium Lounge located in Dubai International Airport’s Concourse D. Available to Qatar Airways First and Business Class passengers and Privilege Club Platinum, Gold and Silver members, the Dubai Premium Lounge is a modern and sophisticated space where travellers can relax and rejuvenate before their journey. The recently opened lounge is decorated with artistic Arabic calligraphy, Mediterranean-style tiles and calming water fountains, featuring private family areas, shower facilities, spacious seating areas and an international cuisine buffet.

Speaking on the airline’s involvement in Arabian Travel Market for this year, Qatar Airways Group Chief Executive, Mr. Akbar Al Baker said: ' Arabian Travel Market has consistently been one of the most exciting platforms for us to participate in, providing us with the opportunity to network with our passengers and partners alike.

We are looking forward to recreating the unique Qatar Airways experience at our stand this year, enabling visitors to get a true taste of what it means to be a Qatar Airways passenger travelling to any one of our more than 150 global destinations'.

Several senior representatives from Qatar Airways will be present during the event. On day one will Mr. Al Baker hold a press conference to discuss the airline’s expansion plans, upcoming developments, and the newest additions to its growing portfolio of offerings.

In East Africa does Qatar Airways fly to Entebbe, Kigali, Nairobi and also to Kilimanjaro, Dar es Salaam and the holiday island of Zanzibar.

Wednesday, 16 September 2015

SOUTH AFRICA: Corrupt Police Kill Tourism


Corrupt traffic cops have emerged as one of the biggest threats to Mpumalanga’s tourism industry for demanding bribes from foreign tourists.

Predatory traffic officers have allegedly been targeting foreign tourists along most of the major routes leading to destinations such as the Kruger National Park, Pilgrim’s Rest and God’s Window. They demand bribes for absurd traffic offences that include:

- Paying toll fees where there are no tollgates;

- Driving too close behind trucks; and

- Changing lanes without indicating.

One example is that of a Dutch family of nine. They were reportedly driving in two Toyota Avanzas and forced to draw R2 000 at an ATM to pay traffic officers in Barberton for allegedly not indicating when they changed lanes, and also failing to stop, on August 1.

A Flemish-speaking couple were allegedly stopped by traffic officers on the R36 outside Ohrigstad and told to pay a R300 toll fee on July 28. This road has no tollgate.

The incidents commonly happen on the N4 toll road and other roads near the towns of Hazyview, Hoedspruit, Lydenburg, White River and Barberton.

Tourism industry stakeholders have embarked on an intensive awareness campaign after Kruger Lowveld Tourism (KLT) recorded at least 135 cases of extortion of foreign tourists by traffic officers since January last year.

KLT executive director and marketing consultant Lisa Sheard said corrupt and intimidating traffic officials had been a “sad feature” of the Kruger Lowveld region – which was the biggest draw card and where most tourist attractions were situated. Mpumalanga receives approximately 1.1 million foreign tourists a year and this region generates about R7bn each year while foreign direct spend in the whole country is about R65bn.

“In recent times, the number of reports relating to incidents of corruption, extortion and intimidation of tourists – particularly international self-drive tourists – by traffic officials has escalated significantly,” said Sheard.

“International self-drive tourists are easy targets because they are easy to spot. They are usually driving a small, rental car with the registration plates of another province, hugging the inside yellow line of the road at slow speeds. In a region that has suffered from high media coverage of other tourism-related crime, this has severely dented the image of the Kruger Lowveld region and Mpumalanga as a tourist destination,” she said.

The Roadside Anti-Corruption Initiative involves the police, KLT and Trans African Concessions (Trac), which manages the N4 freeway. The campaign aims to inform tourists that it is illegal to pay cash to any traffic officer or any other official on the roadside. Business cards are issued to tourists as they enter the Lowveld at the Middelburg and Machadodorp tollgates, with 24-hour contact numbers of the police, KLT and Trac.

Trac will also be erecting boards in key hot spot areas to generate awareness of the campaign.

“Tourism is one of the identified key areas leading to job creation in South Africa,” said Trac’s chief executive Graham Esterhuysen. “The bad experiences of visitors – who have encountered fraud, corruption and theft – reverberate overseas and undo all the good work done by our tourism ambassadors. In the event that this campaign helps to prevent such bad experiences, Trac is fully supportive of the initiative.”

Mpumalanga’s spokesperson for the department of safety, security and liaison, Joseph Mabuza, said it was difficult to fight the problem because tourists often did not report incidents to the police but rather to tourism establishments. “It would assist us if they could report the cases to the police. We could then follow up and institute disciplinary procedures against traffic officials who are implicated,” said Mabuza.

Mpumalanga Tourism Parks Agency’s head of tourism, Xolani Mthethwa, said the parastatal was developing a tourism safety strategy to curb this scourge and it would be finished in October. The strategy would then be submitted to Government.