The 15th Magical Kenya Travel Expo (MKTE 2025), held from 1 to 3 October at Uhuru Gardens in Nairobi, offered more than exhibitions and meetings. It provided a glimpse into the future of African tourism – one increasingly shaped by culture, creativity and continental collaboration. Among the attendees was a delegation aligned with the forthcoming Creatives Connect Afrika Forum and Festival, travelling to Kenya with a wider purpose: to build relationships, gather insight and champion a new direction for African tourism.
From the opening sessions, it became clear that Africa's tourism discourse is evolving. While wildlife and landscapes remain central, discussions at MKTE focused strongly on identity, storytelling and the creative economy. The continent is beginning to position culture not as a supporting feature, but as a driving force for economic growth and regional integration.
A Vision Beyond Destinations
It was during these exchanges that a wider mission came into focus. Led by Emily Mburu-Ndoria of the AfCFTA Secretariat, Rex Omar and Edward Owusu of the Black Star Experience Secretariat, and Kwakye Donkor of Africa Tourism Partners, key conversations shifted away from brochures and booths to focus on deeper themes – music, stories, festivals, fashion, film and the power of Africans travelling to experience one another.
Rather than promoting destinations in isolation, the delegation emphasised the importance of aligning tourism with the creative industries, positioning Africa's cultural assets as core pillars of its tourism strategy.
Nairobi as Prelude to Accra
Throughout MKTE, stakeholders across East, West and Southern Africa echoed a common question: how can Africa move from fragmented promotion to united collaboration? The answer pointed towards Accra, 24 to 26 November, where the Creatives Connect Afrika Forum and Festival will convene cultural leaders, policymakers and investors under the AfCFTA framework.
There was strong interest in Accra as a platform not just for celebration, but for structured dialogue, investment planning and policy development – a space where creativity is treated as strategy.
Key Insights Taken Forward
The Nairobi experience reinforced several essential truths:
- Africa must first market Africa to Africans, building intra-continental pride and mobility.
- Culture and creativity are not entertainment – they are economic assets with export value.
- Tourism needs policy backing, particularly in areas such as visa reform, mobility frameworks and creative industry investment.
From Inspiration to Action
MKTE served as an important catalyst, highlighting both progress and the work yet to be done. It confirmed that Africa is ready to redefine how it presents itself to the world, not solely through landscapes, but through the richness of its living cultures.
As preparations intensify for Accra, Creatives Connect Afrika is emerging not simply as an event, but as a continental commitment – to reimagine African tourism through creativity, collaboration and cultural ownership.
Nairobi opened the conversation. Accra will carry it forward. The story of African tourism is turning a new page.