QUOTE: ‘’If anything else, Alain Saint Ange’s media outreach
should give him the edge as the United Nations’ new secretary-general for world
tourism. The former Seychelles tourism minister has run a highly successful
campaign in the global and local print and electronic media.’’ – Marlan
Padayachee, senior journalist, travel writer, photographer, political and social
commentator, private-public sector consultant and media strategist and adviser
in South Africa. (5 May 2017)
By MARLAN PADAYACHEE
BY the week-ending of 12-14 May, the United Nations will have a new
secretary-general heading its UN World Tourism Organisation from global
tourism’s headquarters in Madrid, Spain.
Among the front-runners is Alain Saint Ange, who resigned as
Seychelles’ long-standing senior minister of tourism to compete for the premier
post that oversees the state of tourism across the world.
So far, St Ange, based on my own experience of election campaigns in the
media, has run a highly successful campaign in his quest to clinch the plum
post and thereby use his wealth of experience and knowledge economy to change
the world of tourism towards a greater people-to-people focus and connecting
the dots of an unequal tourism market, particularly in the arena of creating
sustainable jobs for poorer communities, including his native Seychelles, the
Vanilla Islands of the Indian Ocean Rim and Africa and the Caribbean.
His media milestones to date from his campaign kick-off in January have
been anything but remarkable, innovative, friendly and smart. In the media
narrative, this candidate has grabbed the headlines and dominated the
soundbites and the stand firsts and blurbs on radio and television.
And in the run-up to the election of the new secretary-general of the
United Nations World Travel Organisation, one of the leading candidates on the
slate, Saint Ange, a senior ruling party politician and former government
minister in his mid-ocean island nation, has received excellent and
extraordinary endorsements from fellow compatriots, political personalities,
tourism and hospitality pace-setters and stakeholders and influential
well-wishers.
Communities have also thrown their weight behind the bid to present a
refreshing new face to global tourism.
St Ange was the long-standing and well-heeled Minister of Tourism, Civil
Aviation, Ports and Marine in Seychelles before making a dash for the top-notch
UN job. Since launching his official bid in January this year, St Ange has
received overwhelming support in his quest to vie for the head of secretariat
of the global tourism authority.
St Ange has presented the Seychelles Agenda for Tourism for All to many
nations and industry players. Four months into the race and St Ange is not
letting up. He is also not slowing down in his non-stop campaigning and
lobbying in many capitals of the world soon after he presented his Official
Nomination Documents to Taleb Rifai, current UNWTO secretary-general. He became
the second official candidate on the ballot for the polling on Friday, 12 May
in the Spanish cultural hotspot of Madrid.
Six candidates are in the running for the highest portfolio. There is
growing optimism that the new secretary-general will lead the lucrative,
multi-dimensional global industry into an exciting new phase. The winning
candidate will replace the outgoing secretary-general Taleb Rifai.
Candidates continue to work tirelessly to pull votes from the four
corners of the world to the prized high seat in international tourism. St Ange
is also fighting competition in Africa, with Zimbabwe fielding a candidate
backed by the African Union. South America has two candidates, Brazil and
Colombia, and Georgia and South Korea are also in the race.
The candidates and countries are:
Vahan Martirosyan (Armenia, Minister of Transport)
Márcio Favilla (Brazil, WTO Executive Director)
Jaime Alberto Cabal Sanclemente (Colombia, Ambassador to Austria and the UN organisations based in Vienna)
Zurab Pololikashvili (Georgia, Ambassador to Spain and Permanent Representative to the WTO)
Young-shim Dho (South Korea, Ambassador to Spain and President of the Foundation for the Elimination of Poverty of the WTO)
Walter Mzembi (Zimbabwe, Minister of Tourism)
Márcio Favilla (Brazil, WTO Executive Director)
Jaime Alberto Cabal Sanclemente (Colombia, Ambassador to Austria and the UN organisations based in Vienna)
Zurab Pololikashvili (Georgia, Ambassador to Spain and Permanent Representative to the WTO)
Young-shim Dho (South Korea, Ambassador to Spain and President of the Foundation for the Elimination of Poverty of the WTO)
Walter Mzembi (Zimbabwe, Minister of Tourism)
St Ange has stayed the course and has been straddling many tourist
destinations to muster support and market his progressive policies, including
support for the LGBT communities who often confront violent racism,
discrimination, stigmatising, stereotyping and ostracising in the tourism space
and in nightclubs and social hubs.
Amidst the fanfare, friendships and fraternity, St.Ange, the
official Seychelles Candidate, continues to travel to woo member countries to
cast their ballots for him. His latest foreign foray has been in Swiss town of
Lucerne, where he engaged 500 delegates from 70 countries and marketed his
‘’walk the talk’’ campaigning on sharing his new business models, inspiring
personal stories and building valuable friendships. He was integral to the
‘’Think Tank Session on Tourism’’ at the World Tourism Forum, the last event
before the UNWTO elections. He also enjoyed the hospitality and friendship of
the past president and CEO of the WTF, Martin Barth.
From Lucerne, St Ange is returning to Seychelles before preparing for
the final countdown to his campaign and delivering on his electoral vision in
Madrid next week. Lucerne emerged as a traditional gathering of key tourism
personalities, intra-networking within a strong sense of community and
cultivating interpersonal relationships among CEOs, ministers, investors,
academic leaders and stakeholders to create new roadmaps for generational
global tourism.
The electorate is crucial in the coming week: thirty-four countries are
members of the UNWTO Executive Council: Angola, Azerbaijan, Bahamas, Bulgaria,
China, Costa Rica, Croatia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ecuador, Egypt,
Flanders, France, Germany, Ghana, India, Iran, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Mexico,
Morocco, Mozambique, Peru, Portugal, Republic of Korea, Saudi Arabia, Serbia,
Seychelles, Slovakia, South Africa, Spain, Thailand, Tunisia, and Zambia.
St Ange’s election hustings carries a clear-cut message with a
universally progressive policy of ‘’Tourism for All’’. He has spent hundreds of
hours and resources campaigning on a platform that has blackballed
discrimination in all its manifestations.
There is no place for any form of discrimination in the world of
tourism. He has challenged the other candidates to stand up and voice their
commitment to the people-centred environment of global tourism devoid of the
scourge of discriminatory practices. There will be no room at the inn for
discrimination based on skin colour, race, religion, culture, creed, politics,
gender, sexual preference, disability, political persuasion or wealth status.
His simplified his strategy with a key campaign phrase reads: friends of all,
enemies of none, equal tourism for all.
The United Nations is the torchbearer of human rights and social justice
and the ambassadors of its agencies will stridently promote respect, tolerance
and diversity, according to St Ange. The new culture in tourism should
beneficiate stakeholders, stimulate partnerships, create jobs, promote
eco-tourism sustainability, resurrect cottage industries and bolster local
economic developments.
His campaign has attracted widespread publicity in the print and
electronic media, as well as social media platforms. From interviews on BBC
World to newspapers, magazines and radio stations, St Ange has articulated,
voiced and aired a singular and powerful policy of connecting the dots on the
world map by bringing people, cultures and destinations together to enjoy the
fruits of a global village characterised by a cacophony of sounds and sights.
Adopting a positive and unique approach, St Ange’s campaign has emphasised the
need to reach out to the private industry and media.
By far, he is the only candidate who has garnered a record number of
endorsements from private companies and stakeholders in his native Indian Ocean
island nation and abroad. His visibility and profiling grew progressively in
the print publications, radio and television.
The campaign’s coup de grace is an interview with CNN presenter Richard
Quest on Quest Means Business, followed by engaging conversations with Adam
Boulton on Sky TV and BBC Radio Africa. St Ange also made a raft of articles on
the pages of full-colour magazines, namely Britain’s FIRST, and prestige
publications in Africa and the Middle East.
His interview with the Travel Daily has highlighted the impasse that
tourism and insecurity are not good bedfellows and wants to make this anomaly
one of the pillows in his vision for tourism, alongside pressing the UN and the
UNWTO to proliferate sustainable tourism across the spectrum.
St Ange has also been well received in inter-governmental forums:
Thailand is among the many tourism nations that gave St Ange an audience. St
Ange shared his ‘’Tourism for All’’ mission and vision with Tourism and Sports
Minister Kobkarn Wattanavrangkul on the side-lines of the World Tourism Travel
Council summit in Bangkok.
He also presented his Statement of Intent and discuss to Pongpanu
Svetarundra, ministerial permanent secretary. At the meeting, St Ange was
supported by his compatriots, Nico Barito, presidential special envoy to the
ASEAN bloc of countries and Pascal Viroleau, CEO of the Indian Ocean Vanilla
Islands, a cluster of Seychelles, Mauritius, Madagascar, Comoros, Reunion and
Mayotte islands.
As nations enjoying a cordial relationship, Thailand and Seychelles are
committed to a pact of sustainable tourism, safety and security. The tourism
agenda was also presented to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Commented HYPERLINK "http://www.eturbonews.com/author/etn-managing-editor"
t "_blank" eTN: ‘’Candidate Alain St Ange has a simple formula of
‘friends of all, enemies of none equals tourism for all’ and tourism is the
number one industry in Seychelles, and the person competing for the UN post
managed to almost single-handed put Seychelles on the map of global tourism and
was widely praised as one of the most successful and outspoken ministers of
tourism. The Seychelles is the only country on the globe where anyone can
arrive with no visa.”
‘’He is the only candidate that had actively reached out to LGBT
travellers and his country is now welcoming this group with open arms.’’
St Ange views tourism as good custodians of what destinations have been
blessed with. He believes sustainable tourism can promote long-term tourism and
help economically struggling countries to alleviate poverty and inculcate a
climate of peace. Louis D’Amore, founder and president of the International
Institute for Peace Through Tourism, is a great fan of this vision.
St Ange’s vision extends to creating a single stage for world tourism
and once in office, he plans to decentralise the UNWTO headquarters from
Madrid: ‘’I want to enter into discussions with countries that are not members
of the UNWTO. I will invite them to the table. We have one tourism industry and
we need to see the world working together to grow that tourism cake for
everyone to benefit in return.”
For St Ange, it is worrying that major tourism giants like the USA,
Britain, Australia and Singapore are not member nations. Madrid apart, the
opening of satellite offices in regions and key countries is also on the cards.
His manifesto will also explore other key points, such as opening
cross-sectorial meetings with private sector organizations like the WTTC, PATA
and others, and the UNWTO, UNESCO, ICAO, UNEP on the second side, and thirdly
the importance of the media playing in local and global tourism.
A new protocol could see ministers of tourism, civil aviation and
internal and home affairs sitting together and brain-storming security and air
access issues: “Secondly, it is again an extension of sustainable tourism where
training is looked at with member states to ensure that regions have good hotel
and tourism academies where languages are also taught. Training brings job
satisfaction and creates additional value for people in tourism destinations. ”
“Thirdly to look at communication and marketing with member states. This
will look at standards and value-for-money, but also the question of “What is
Tourism?” and help countries move away from the connotation that tourism is a
hotel or excursion. We need to replace this concept with the country being the
tourism and to look at the infrastructure, cleanliness, culture and people.”
“I want to be remembered as having made a difference and having become the
spokesman for tourism wherever a success story is developing or a disaster has
occurred.”
Endorsements have come from some of the industry’s eminent players:
Association of Women Travel Executives (AWTE); Germany’s Thomas Cook Group
Airlines Condor Flugdienst GmbH, European Leisure Airlines Group; Wolfgang H
Thome of the Aviation, Tourism and Conservation News (Eastern Africa and the
Indian Ocean Islands); Maxime Behar, President of the ICCO (a 48-member
countries public relations community); Peter Sinon, former Seychelles
Ambassador, Minister and former executive director of the African Development
Bank (eastern constituency); Association of Inbound Operators (Mauritius);
St Ange made his case to 12 ministers and officials at the recent
African Ministers Meeting for CAF 2017 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Among the high
profile people were Taleb Rifai, outgoing UNWTO secretary-general, Seychellois,
Elsia Grandcourt as the UNWTO’s Director for Africa and Anne Lafortune of
Seychelles Tourism.
A single, common passport for Southern African Development Community
countries, plus a no-visa policy will contribute to boosting intra-Africa
travel and business cooperation.
On another front, Sinach, born Osinachi Kalu, Nigeria’s award-winning
gospel singer and songwriter, also threw her support behind St Ange during a
performance in Victoria recently.
From the Diplomat magazine to the talking to Travel Daily, St Ange been
push the point of sustainable tourism as a means of creating jobs and promoting
long-term prosperity, alleviating poverty and encouraging cross-border tourism:
‘’People are simply part and parcel of their tourism industry across villages,
towns and cities.’’
St Ange also identified safety and security, equality, training, and
cross-sectorial interaction as being key to the future of the industry, and
pledged to bring non-member states into the UNWTO, especially the USA.
Alain St Ange has won the hearts and minds of the press – newspapers,
magazines, radio and TV have given him good coverage and his campaign approach
of engaging the private sector actively has been singled out as one of the
successes of his campaign checklist.
Cometh the hour, Cometh the Man: Now the hour has come and St Ange can
put his best foot forward to tell the world why he should be the next
secretary-general of an organisation that can reshape tourism and connect the
dots of tourism hotspots and hubs from remote cultural villages to the bright
lights of vibrant cosmopolitan – and it’s all about the sights and sounds of
socio-cultural landmarks.