Kenya has reaffirmed its commitment to deepening regional tourism and people-to-people exchange within East Africa, as the Kenyan High Commissioner to Uganda, Ambassador Joash Maangi, flagged off a group of 697 pupils and 23 staff members from Hillside Nursery and Primary School, Naalya, for an educational excursion to Mombasa, Kenya.

The group, composed of Primary Seven finalists, was officially flagged off at the Kenya High Commission in Kampala before setting off for Kenya’s coastal city. During the trip, the learners will travel aboard the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) to Mombasa, where they will visit Fort Jesus, the Marine Park, and other iconic sites along the Kenyan coast.
Speaking at the flag-off ceremony, Ambassador Joash Maangi commended Hillside Nursery and Primary School for sustaining a long-standing tradition of exposing Ugandan learners to Kenya’s cultural and geographical heritage.
“First and foremost, I want to thank Hillside Nursery and Primary School for choosing Kenya as the place to take their students to celebrate the end of their primary schooling days,” Ambassador Maangi said. “Kenya and Uganda are each other’s most important sources of tourism. Kenya provides Uganda with the highest number of tourists from any country in the world, and Uganda gives Kenya the second largest number of tourists, only after the United States.”

The High Commissioner noted that Kenya is targeting 300,000 Ugandan visitors by the end of 2025, up from 270,000 the previous year. He described the Hillside school trip as a significant contribution to that goal.
“This group alone adds nearly 700 visitors to our total. We are pleased and optimistic that such exchanges will help us meet our target,” he added. “It is a good experience for the young ones to enjoy East Africa and to grow up knowing that Kenya is their home, just as young Kenyans view Uganda as theirs. We want to continue increasing the number of tourists from Kenya to Uganda, and from Uganda to Kenya.”
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