- Rev. Hatch ya taimaka wajen jagorantar cajin wata hukumar laima wacce zata tallata yawon bude ido na yankin Caribbean
- Re. Hatch's wucewa babbar asara ce ga duk yankin
- Rev. Andrew Hatch yana da shekaru 91
The Tourungiyar Yawon Bude Ido ta Caribbean (CTO) ya koya tare da tsananin alhinin mutuwar Rev. Andrew Hatch, ɗayan manyan masu kafa kuma mataimakin shugaban farko na Cibiyar Nazarin Yawon Bude Ido da Cibiyoyin Caribbean (CTRC), wanda ya haɗu da Tourungiyar yawon buɗe ido ta Caribbean a 1989 don kafa CTO. Rev. Andrew Hatch yana da shekaru 91.
A matsayinsa na darekta a majalisar kula da coci-coci na Caribbean a Barbados, Rev. Hatch ya taimaka jagorantar cajin ga wata hukumar kula da lamuran da za ta gudanar ba wai kawai tallata yawon bude ido na yankin Caribbean ba, har ma da mahimman wuraren bincike da bunkasa albarkatun mutane.
Tare da wasu manyan 'yan wasan yankin kamar Carlos Diago, sannan mataimakin daraktan yawon bude ido na Puerto Rico da Peter Morgan, daya daga cikin manyan masu kafa kuma shugaban CTRC na farko, Rev. Hatch ya shiga cikin jerin shawarwari a 1971 - mafi kyawu wanda aka san shi a Haiti, wanda CCC ta shirya - wanda ya yi kira ga ma'aikata da su bincika fa'idojin tattalin arziki da ba su da shakku da kuma halin zamantakewar da muhalli na yawon bude ido.
Ba za a taɓa mantawa da gudummawarsa mai ma'ana ga batun yanki da ci gaban masana'antar yawon buɗe ido ta Caribbean ba, kuma wucewarsa babbar asara ce ga yankin baki ɗaya.
ABUBUWAN DA ZA KU GUDU DAGA WANNAN LABARI:
- Ba za a taɓa mantawa da gudummawarsa mai ma'ana ga batun yanki da ci gaban masana'antar yawon buɗe ido ta Caribbean ba, kuma wucewarsa babbar asara ce ga yankin baki ɗaya.
- Andrew Hatch, one of the major founders and the first vice chairman of the Caribbean Tourism Research and Development Centre (CTRC), which merged with the Caribbean Tourism Association in 1989 to form the CTO.
- Along with some key regional players like Carlos Diago, then deputy director of tourism for Puerto Rico and Peter Morgan, one of the major founders and the first chairman of the CTRC, Rev.