Samoa tourism benefiting from Fiji coup

Wednesday, 16 Jul, 2007 0

An NZPA report says that the Deputy Prime Minister of Samoa has said that tourism to his country has been boosted by the coup in Fiji recently but he is concerned it is impacting on investment in the region.

Misa Telefoni Retzlaff is also tourism minister and told NZPA that the initial coup had not affected tourism, but since the spat over the expulsion of New Zealand High Commissioner Michael Green there had been a marked increase in tourism to Samoa.

“It’s been tremendous and we are going to earn close to 290 million Samoan tala (about $NZ550 million) in the financial year that’s just ended at the end of June. We in fact have done very, very well.”  

Foreign Minister Winston Peters is here with a delegation of 67 including MPs, officials and NGOs, and it had to be spread across three hotels because of high bookings.

But Mr Telefoni says while tourism is important instability in the region was impacting on the confidence of foreign investors.

Just after the Fiji coup in May 2000 Mr Telefoni was in Geneva making a presentation to a chamber of commerce and was surprised that attendees did not appear to differentiate between Pacific Island countries.

“After my presentation … all the questions were about Fiji.”  “We are very hung up in the Pacific at the moment about attracting foreign investment.”  “I could not convince my audience there was a world of difference, culturally, racially between Fiji and Samoa,” he said.

“I think the perception of people sitting in board rooms in New York and London is that trouble anywhere in the Pacific is trouble everywhere in the Pacific.”

“Samoa is seen as the model economy in terms of achievement and yet we have had our problems trying to attract foreign investment. “

“I think all the focus of Asian Development Bank and IMF has been on us because they’ve been of the view that if Samoa can’t attract foreign investment then who can?”

Samoa had GDP growth of 2.6 per cent last year and exports $S263.3m, mainly fish, clothing, beer, coconut oil and cream, automotive parts and taro.

In a speech today, Mr Peters described Samoa as a “pin-up” country for the Pacific, adding, “Sadly in recent times we have seen elsewhere in the Pacific, in tragic circumstances, how the breakdown of law and order, combined with the erosion of traditional power structures, has led to a serious reversal of economic fortunes.”

“In contrast, Samoa stands out as a beacon of stability in the region.”

Prime Minister Tuilaepa Lupesoliai Sailele Malielegaoi said New Zealand had played a key role in the country’s stability, adding, “Things are moving very smoothly.”

He said the NZAid programme of about $NZ10m a year focused on institution strengthening, and capacity building, adding, “This is an area which is very, very important in ensuring that the workings of the government are as efficient as possible and that means the people in place of authority do understand what the responsibilities are and that the good governance principles of accountability and transparency are being complied with,” he said.

“Failures in good governance is the general cause of the many failures in democracies in many, many small island countries.”

Report by The Mole



 

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John Alwyn-Jones



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