image: sabahtourism.com |
KOTA KINABALU: Sabah has set its sights on
obtaining Unesco Global Geopark status for Mount Kinabalu and its surrounding
districts by 2020.
State Deputy Chief Minister Christina Liew said
Sabah Parks was working to get the area recognised as a national geopark site
as the first step towards being declared a Unesco Global Geopark Site.
Dubbed "Aspiring Kinabalu Geopark," the
proposed area covers the entire Kinabalu Park as well as the whole or parts of
the Ranau, Kota Belud and Kota Marudu districts.
Kinabalu Park, which is already recognised as a
Unesco World Heritage Site, covers an area of 75,370ha.
"After all, the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) is encouraging nations to protect
and preserve their cultural and natural heritage which have outstanding
universal value of biodiversity," Liew, who is also State Tourism, Culture
and Tourism Minister, said after a meeting with Sabah Parks officials, Sabah
Department of Minerals and Geosciences Malaysia, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
and Universiti Malaysia Sabah here.
Liew said the proposed Kinabalu Unesco Global
Geopark was a new tourism concept and her ministry would prepare a cabinet
paper for consideration and approval.
She said a Kinabalu Unesco Global Geopark Site
would put Sabah on the world map and boost tourism growth as well as bring
socio-economic benefits to local communities involved in the Kinabalu Geopark
Initiative.
"This can be achieved through creating jobs
and participating in tourism-related entrepreneurial activities," she
said.
Langkawi was the first to be accorded Unesco Global
Geopark status in Malaysia in 2007.
-thestar online.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.