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The Editorial this week highlights:- a. Indian Ocean Winners of the travel Oscars announced & CONDE NAST’s 2018 Readers Choice Awards has also been released. b. Clipping the wings of the Seychelles Tourism Industry: Vertical Integration. c. Nick Baldwin , the first Seychellois athlete to qualify for the Ironman World Championship in Hawaïi . Stand alone articles this week:- 1. The Anse Mondon Trail is now Re-Opened on Silhouette Island in Seychelles. 2. Joe Albert’s personal touch and watchful eye is a successful approach at Domaine de La Reserve of Praslin. 3. Avani Barbarons Seychelles Resort & Spa using Seychelles Creole evenings to unite cultures and increase visibility . 4. H-Resort Beau Vallon Beach is the 2018 Seychelles Leading Green Resort. 5. From Barbados to Seychelles: Stefan Lewis, Digital Marketing Manager at Raffles Seychelles. 6. Turkish Night at Club Liberte Casino in Seychelles. 7. Sri Lankan President’s State visit to Seychelles takes him the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Vallée de Mai on the island of Praslin . 8. Ethiopian Airlines daily trips to the Seychelles. 9. Seychelles conquers well-frequented Irish bridal show. 10. WORLD TOURISM FORUM LUCERNE 2 – 3 MAY 2019. 11. Caribbean Tourism stakeholders to meet in Puerto Rico next month – Are the Indian Ocean Vanilla Islands ready as well?. 12. Seychelles attends the 55th edition of TTG Incontri Trade Fair in Italy. 13. Reunion Island celebrates the Maloya UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage. 14. Seychelles Tourism Board promotes country at “Africa Showcase” in the USA. 15. Medical Tourism Market to rise at Promising 14.9% – what is good for tourism is good for locals in Seychelles “Dialysis patients protest in Victoria to save their centre”. 16.  International Newswires continue to republish our Report.

Alain St.Ange

Last week, we touched on the need to ensure that Seychelles keeps its economy well oiled. This question brought in many reactions, and everyone agrees that Seychelles needs to further consolidate its tourism industry. Too many hard working Seychellois are dependent on a buoyant tourism industry. Visibility is key today, and visibility will remain key for Seychelles to be relevant as a tourism destination. The World Travel Awards Ceremony held in Durban South Africa, has just ended and this coincided with CONDE NAST publishing its Readers Choice Awards. The importance of both these listings are known by the Tourism & Travel World, and the performance by tourism destinations is often related to being seen or remaining a best kept secret.

Seychelles and other islands of the Indian Ocean Vanilla Islands Group know they need to have a major event that will act as the catalyst for press visits to help increase visibility and in so doing, remain relevant. Press cannot come back to write about lovely beaches, as they have all done so by now. Tourism remains the golden goose for Seychelles and everything must be done to ensure it stops losing all of its feathers and down. Every tourism industry player is important for the country, and they must be respected for being part of the industry that remains the backbone for the island’s economy. ‘Clipping the wings’ of the industry, as transpired in answers by Tourism Minister Didier Dogley to the question session at the National Assembly, may rub many on the wrong side, and repercussions may well be a slowing down of the island’s economy that remains so dependent of tourism.

Indian Ocean Winners of the travel Oscars announced
& CONDE NAST’s 2018 Readers Choice Awards has also been released

Before looking at the World Travel Awards, and the positioning of the Indian Ocean Vanilla Islands in the Conde Nast Readers Choice Awards, let us look at the performance of our regional islands in official visitor arrival statistics for the period ending October 2018. Where each island stands in their approach for visibility in key tourism source markets and in the world of tourism, is known to every tourism entrepreneur, as it is known to each and every potential holiday maker.

Seychelles – A total of 7,188 visitors arrived in Seychelles during week 40 of 2018. The year to date figure for 2018 shows that 268,049 visitors disembarked in Seychelles. This was 1% above that of 2017 (265,788).

Mauritius – Tourist arrivals for the month of September 2018 increased by 6.8% to reach 102,849 compared to 96,282 for September 2017. For the period January to September 2018, tourist arrivals increased by 4.3% to attain 975,066 compared to 934,679 for the same period of last year.

Maldives – (Up to August) 972,839 and stands at + 9.1%
The award ceremony for the 2018 Travel Oscars took place recently in Durban / South Africa. During the ceremony, the African mainland winners were announced, as well as the winners of the Indian Ocean region.

The World Travel Awards Africa 2018 go to familiar names

Air Mauritius bagged the most awards for the Indian Ocean region, with five in the following categories:

Leading Airline
Leading Airline – Business Class
Leading Airline Brand
Leading Airport Lounge
Indian Ocean’s Leading Cabin Crew

Close rival Air Seychelles, a multiple winner in the past, this year only walked away with one trophy for Leading Airline – Economy Class

The Maldives were named as the Indian Ocean’s Leading Beach Destination, Leading Dive Destination and Leading Destination overall, while Mauritius took the honours as leading Honeymoon Destination and as Leading Cruise Destination this year. Both countries leaving past favourite, Seychelles, trailing.

In the respective national ‘league’, Mauritius came second with a total of 13 awards, behind the Maldives, which carried home an additional 16 trophies.

The Seychelles took 9 national trophies home, followed by Madagascar with three and Reunion Island with two trophies. Mauritius’ Tourism was also named as the region’s Leading Tourism Board.

The MAIA Luxury Resort in the Seychelles, alongside Constance Hotels, took two awards each as Seychelles’ Leading Boutique Hotel and Leading Luxury Hotel Villa and Leading Family Resort (Constance Ephelia) and Leading Hotel (Constance Lemuria). The Constance Ephelia also took a regional trophy home for being named the Indian Ocean’s Leading Green Resort. H-Resort Beau Vallon Beach is the 2018 Seychelles Leading Green Resort.

The Constance Hotels group notably also bagged three awards for their Mauritius hotels and four Indian Ocean region awards.

The Indian Ocean’s Leading New Resort award went to the newly opened Four Seasons Resort on the Seychelles’ island of Desroches.

The full list of awards can be accessed by clicking on the link below:

https://www.worldtravelawards.com/winners/2018/indian-ocean

Condé Nast Traveller readers ranked the 30 best islands in the world outside the U.S. in the 2018 Readers’ Choice Awards survey, from far-flung stunners in Southeast Asia to volcanic outcrops in the Mediterranean. This year, we’ve broken them out by region: the best in Asia, Australia and the South Pacific, Caribbean and the Atlantic, Europe, North America, and best in the rest of the world (phew). Don’t worry—there’s a separate list for the U.S. entirely. Did your favourite make the cut? Here’s some island inspiration for your winter vacation.

In Conde Nast Traveller Readers Award 2018 – in the Top 5 in the Rest of the World category we see Maldives coming out first followed by Mauritius, Galapagos, then Seychelles and finally Zanzibar.

Maldives

1. Maldives

A chain of 26 atolls and more than 1,000 islands in the Indian Ocean, the Republic of Maldives is one of the most sought-after tropical destinations in the world. It’s dense with megawatt luxury villas and overwater bungalows, and the diving is unreal (though, sadly, some of the coral has been threatened by bleaching); still, there’s a dive for all skill levels at Ari Atoll, where you can swim with rays and, deeper down, reef sharks.

Pro tip: Naladhu Private Island Maldives, the number one resort in the Indian Ocean (per this year’s reader survey), has just 19 guest quarters, all with dedicated butlers (or Very Good Chaps, VGCs), providing a level of service that’s hard to match. It’s also only 30 minutes from Malé’s international airport by the hotel’s speedboat.

Getting there: Fly into Malé’s international airport and transfer there to the appropriate resort or atoll.

Mauritius

2. Mauritius

Instagram and Pinterest have created renewed interest in this island in the Indian Ocean, thanks to its “underwater waterfall”—a visually stunning runoff of sand and silt best viewed from above. Roughly 550 miles east of Madagascar, Mauritius may also be home to a lost continent hiding beneath the waves.

Pro tip: Don’t trust the scales on Mauritius, as the island has a stronger gravitational field, causing things (and people) to weigh more.

Getting there: The island’s Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam International Airport seems a mouthful, but this international airport is your link for flights to other cities in Africa, as well as to major cities in Europe, Asia, and Australia.

3. Galápagos Islands, Ecuador

Do we really have to explain the allure of the Galápagos? Many lucky readers have had the chance to visit this of-another-time stretch of Ecuador, with its dinosaur-like giant tortoises lumbering through the tall grass and real-life blue-footed boobies.

Pro tip: A cruise is definitely the preferred way to explore the islands. Celebrity Cruise’s Xpedition only ferries 100 passengers and holds nightly lectures by naturalists from Galápagos National Park.

Getting there: Most travelers fly to Quito or Guayaquil (which is closer to the islands) before picking up their tour. You can also extend a trip and stay on Santa Cruz or Isabela within the Galápagos, with more lodging options on Isabela.

Seychelles

4. Seychelles

Our readers aren’t alone in loving the remote beauty of this African nation—”Prince William and Kate Middleton, and Victoria and David Beckham, spent their honeymoons on the North Island, and some stretches are so on-a-desert-island bare that even parts of Castaway were filmed here, on Cousin Island,” says Traveler contributor Derek Blasberg. What’s the ultimate draw? The Seychelles’ natural wonders, he adds. “A bright blue sky, crisp white beaches, and natural ecosystem that very nearly felt like a religious experience.”

Pro tip, per Blasberg: “In the UNESCO World Heritage site Vallée de Mai, which locals believe is the true site of the Garden of Eden, I became obsessed with the curiously shaped coco de mer nut, which can only be found in the Seychelles. The nut can weigh up to 33 pounds and produces the largest seed in the world.”

Getting there: Air France, Air Seychelles, and Turkish Airlines have regular flights that connect to Seychelles International Airport (SEZ), just south of the capital of Victoria.

Zanzibar, Tanzania

5. Zanzibar, Tanzania

“The very word ‘Zanzibar’ is steeped in exoticism and mystery,” says Traveler contributor Kelly Phillips Badal. “This magical place—or rather places —is the name given to a group of 50 tropical islands off the coast of Tanzania. It’s a word associated with white sand beaches, spices, and fresh seafood, with a tangled past of traders, slaves, and treasure.

Pro tip, per Badal: Start on one of the two main islands: Unguja (colloquially known as Zanzibar Island), and home to Stone Town, a UNESCO site and former Swahili coastal trading town; or Pemba, its wilder northern sister, 31 miles away. “A small plane from Dar Es Salaam, bumpy transfer to the southwestern edge of the island, and a 20-minute speedboat ride brought us to the dock of Fundu Lagoon. It’s an exclusive 18-bungalow escape reachable only by boat and one of just a handful of lodgings on [Pemba].”

Getting there: The aforementioned small plane and bumpy transfer from Dar Es Salaam to Zanzibar Island or Pemba.

Conde Nast’s China edition has elevated five of Seychelles’ leading resorts into their Gold List

Conde Nast’s China edition has elevated five of Seychelles’ leading resorts into their Gold List, recognizing their five star luxury status and standing in the Chinese market place. All the resorts named have made it to the top in various other ranking lists over the past years and have contributed to the fame of Seychelles as one of the world’s most sought after island destinations.

The five, in alphabetical order, are the

Four Seasons Resort Seychelles
Fregate Island Private
MAIA Luxury Resort & Spa
North Island
Six Senses Zil Pasyon, Felicite Island

Clipping the wings of the Seychelles Tourism Industry: Vertical Integration

Minister Didier Dogley
Minister responsible for Tourism, Civil Aviation, Ports & Marine

Minister Didier Dogley, the island’s Minister responsible for Tourism, was in the National Assembly last week to answer questions on his “Amendments to the Vertical Integration policy” that is set to touch the Tourism Industry of Seychelles, and only the tourism industry players. Other very big economic players settled and commanding other sections of the island’s economy, can diversify into the tourism industry, as they continue to control their section of expertise and other lines of business, they are already well established in.

An extract of the Government daily Newspaper, Nation, revels the “Clipping of the Wings”  of the tourism industry move:-

“The Baie Ste Anne Praslin elected Member, the Hon. Churchill Gill MNA quizzed Minister Dogley on the amendments made earlier in June to the Vertical Integration policy and what these changes entail.

Vertical Integration is the term used to describe a strategy wherein the supply chain of a company is owned by that same company, this means that the company operates various services or provides different products which are normally operated by separate firms.

Since this method can impact negatively on small businesses, the ministry for tourism established the Vertical Integration policy in 2008 in order to address the pleas made by small businesses in the tourism industry and to provide some form of control to avoid that large tourism service providers dominate the local market.

Minister Dogley stated that the policy was revised in June 2018 and assured the members that the revision process had included consultative sessions with all stakeholders in the tourism industry.

A total of eight major amendments were made, Minister Dogley explained.

Firstly, tour operators are only able to invest in or manage not more than 150 hotel rooms compared to previous conditions in the policy that allowed an investment of 15% of the total operational hotel rooms in the country.

“For instance there were 6171 rooms in July 2018, which would have made it possible for a tour operator to acquire 925 hotel rooms. This shows that with the increasing number of rooms, there were potentials for the tour operators to monopolise the market and this is why we opted for a fixed number,” Minister Dogley further explained.

Other amendments include motorised watersports limitations as well as limitation on hotels that can gain access to the bicycle rental business on La Digue.

The amendments also make provisions for tour operators to be able to own specialised restaurants and compete in the ferry business.

Additionally, hotels are allowed to own and manage only one excursion boat of a maximum capacity of 12 passengers under the revised policy.  This is to encourage hotels to outsource this service to other small excursion firms.

In the same line, tour and hire craft operators will have to adhere to a new condition dictating that they only operate with five boats instead of 10 to allow small, independent boat operators to gain a greater foothold to the excursion market.

Operators who currently have more than five boats have been given a grace period of one year starting June 1, 2018 to do away with the excess boats.

On this point, several MNAs expressed their concerns that this would not necessarily help smaller businesses since the ministry does not cap the capacity limit for these excursion boats.

“It is difficult for us to put a limit on the size of the boats operated by tour operators because we are developing the cruise ship business in Seychelles and we need these big boats that have a large capacity in order to cater for the large number of tourists during the cruise ship seasons,” Minister Dogley replied.

Minister Dogley also stated that Seychelles is a free market and they cannot enforce policies that are too strict and that could potentially scare away investors from the tourism industry.”