Lagos, Nigeria – Karl Hala, Group General Manager of Continental Hotels, has made a compelling case for Nigeria’s untapped potential to dominate global tourism, urging a radical shift in narrative ownership during his keynote at the Business Day Tourism Conference.
The Perception Paradox
Current Reality:
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Tourism contributes only 4.5% to Nigeria’s GDP (vs. 9.2% in Kenya)
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Global media often highlights risks over riches
Hala’s Counter:
“Our biggest barrier isn’t insecurity or infrastructure—it’s perception. Nigeria is energy, hustle, and cultural wealth waiting to be showcased.”
Nigeria’s Hidden Tourism Gold
Cultural Assets:
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Ancient Nok terracotta artifacts
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Historic Benin and Oyo kingdoms
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250+ ethnic groups with unique traditions
Modern Advantages:
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Youth population (60% under 25) as “tourism army”
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Fusion of tradition and tech (e.g., geo-tagged cattle)
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Nollywood’s global cultural influence
The Hospitality Multiplier Effect
Continental Hotels’ Proof Point:
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Two 5-star properties in Lagos/Abuja
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1,000+ rooms hosting international guests
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“Every satisfied guest becomes a Nigeria ambassador.”
Growth Levers:
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Community-Led Tourism:
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Eco-lodges in Osun/Cross River
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Cultural festivals in Zaria/Enugu
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Infrastructure 2.0:
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Tourism innovation hubs
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Culinary institutes
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Digital heritage trails
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Call to Action
Train Youth as experience creators, not just service staff
Digitize Heritage – From palace stories to street food
Fix Visa Policies – Compete with Egypt/Turkey’s ease of access
Hala’s Challenge:
“Let’s stop waiting to be chosen. We’re not Africa’s underdog—we’re its heartbeat. The world needs to feel it.”
Why This Matters Now:
Economic Diversification: Tourism could rival oil with proper investment
Job Creation: Youth-centric models could unlock millions of roles
Soft Power: Correcting narratives attracts investment and visitors
Success Blueprint:
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Turkey/Egypt: Thrive despite past unrest through storytelling
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Rwanda: Transformed perception via gorilla tourism & clean cities