Thursday, 28th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Minister visits tourism sites, begins with Owu Water Fall

By Editor
08 February 2017   |   3:32 am
The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has kicked-started a tour of tourism sites in the country with a visit on Sunday to the spectacular Owu Waterfall in Kwara State.

Owu Water Fall

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, has kicked-started a tour of tourism sites in the country with a visit on Sunday to the spectacular Owu Waterfall in Kwara State.

Mohammed, who was accompanied by representatives of the local community in which the waterfall is located, officials of the Kwara State Ministry of Culture and Tourism, described Owu Waterfall as one of the wonders of nature, saying the government is now looking toward natural assets like the waterfall with a view to developing them for their economic benefits.

“We are all awed by the awesomeness nature of the almighty,” he said. “You can’t begin to wonder: where is the source of this water? And what I found most enticing and really baffling is the louder we shout, the more the volume of the waterfall. This is one of those natural assets that we have been bestowed with and there is no country that has this kind of asset that will not be able to exploit it for economic benefit.”

The minister also underscored the dearth of infrastructure as one of the major challenges confronting tourism development in Nigeria, but expressed optimism that the revitalisation of the Presidential Council on Tourism (PCT) would bring about synergy within the government to surmount the challenge.

“Fortunately, we have been very busy trying to revitalise the Presidential Council on Tourism because tourism is not a stand-alone ministry. Without the cooperation of other ministries such as Power, Works and Housing – because you need to provide road, electricity and security – you cannot actually have a vibrant tourism industry. I am
happy I came here personally today and I have seen it and at the next meeting of the Steering Committee of the PCT, we will actually put this across.”

Mohammed promised to liaise with his counterpart in the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing to give priority to the construction of the 7-kilometer access road to the waterfall. He also commended the Owa-Onire Community and the Kwara State Government for encouraging tourists to visit the Owu Waterfall through the facilitation of access and the provision of security.

The Tour Guide and leader in the community, Mr. Akanbi Sunday, who chronicled the history of the Owu Waterfall, thanked Mohammed for being the first-ever Minister of Information and Culture to visit the waterfall.

The minister had earlier paid a courtesy visit to the Onire of Owa-Onire, Oba Abdulraham Fabiyi, and informed the traditional ruler of his desire to have first-hand knowledge of the Owu Waterfall with a view to developing it as a viable tourist site in line with
the diversification policy of the Federal Government.

In this article

0 Comments