Rwanda drops fees to visit gorillas amid steep decline…

Rwanda drops fees to visit gorillas amid steep decline in business

Rwanda has reduced permit fees to visit its famous gorillas following a steep decline in numbers since prices were hiked.

Fees have been reduced by 30% for the low season in the hope that visitors will return.

Earlier this year the WWF conservation group said the mountain gorilla subspecies was making a comeback, with numbers above 600 from an estimated 480 in 2010 in the Virunga Massif, a mountainous area encompassing parts of Rwanda, Uganda and Congo.

In Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park, tourists routinely trek to see gorillas in their natural habitat.

A male silverback mountain gorilla (Ben Curtis/AP)

Conservation is big business in the East African nation, where tourism is the top foreign exchange earner.

In May 2017 the government doubled the price of a permit to visit the gorillas from 750 to 1,500 US dollars, making the fee the highest in the region.

A similar fee is 600 dollars in Uganda and 400 dollars in Congo.

Since then the Rwanda Development Board has lost business to Uganda, leaving many guides and others in the hospitality industry without income, according to the park authority’s website.

The peak of Mount Bisoke volcano where mountain gorillas live (Ben Curtis/AP)

The peak of Mount Bisoke volcano where mountain gorillas live (Ben Curtis/AP)

“It was chaotic. I can’t estimate the percentage of tourists we lost but it was very bad,” said Parfait Kajibwami, manager of Le Bambou Gorilla Lodge near the park.

The lodge estimates it lost more than 40% of its clients.

Following the drop in tourist numbers, Volcanoes National Park decided to reduce the fee from November to May to 1,050 dollars.

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