The Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) hosted the PATA Hub City Forum, London, July 5, 2012 at the Institute of Directors in Pall Mall. The objective was to engage on a variety of strategic matters including UK border issues, inward investment for the UK, Heathrow Airport, crisis response, the 2012 Olympic impact, and the UK’s controversial Air Passenger Duty.
The UK’s Minister for Trade and Investment Lord Green said: “I am delighted that the Pacific Asia Travel Association selected London as a strategic location for PATA’s Hub City Forum on July 5. The Asia Pacific region is a vibrant and dynamic one with many burgeoning economies and a vital source of investment, business and trade for the United Kingdom. The growth of travel, tourism, business and investment in and from the Asia Pacific region is extremely welcome and something the British government supports fully. I welcome PATA’s encouragement of dialogue, increased cooperation and closer links with London as an important and influential global centre.”
High profile attendees included the Chief Executive of the UK Border Agency, Rob Whiteman and the CEO of BAA, Colin Matthews, responsible for Heathrow Airport, Carlos Vogeler, special envoy of UNWTO, Director of Turkish tourism Tolga Tuyluoglu, and Helen Marano of WTTC.
Opening the event PATA CEO Martin J Craigs underlined PATA’s unique status as a highly influential association of private and public sector members in more than 40 countries and its ability to engage simultaneously with world political leaders and captains of industry. “PATA is a catalyst for increasing cooperation and fostering trade with, and investment from, the dynamic Asia Pacific region, where growth is the greatest globally,” he said.
“PATA’s aligned advocacy programme on key issues with organisations such as ATAG, IATA, UNWTO, WTTC, and AAPA means that travel and tourism can speak out on key issues with a united voice,” he added.
Rob Whiteman underlined the vast operations carried out by the UK Border Agency, the largest part of the UK government operating overseas and dealing with millions of visa applications. He spoke about China as a key area of focus with 14 offices and underlined increased cooperation with other countries, particularly the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand to enable faster processing.
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