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Uganda's High Commission in Canada has set an ambitious target of attracting over twenty thousand (20,000) tourists from Canada to the Pearl of Africa.
This was revealed by Allan Kajik, the Chargé d'affaires at the Uganda High Commission in Ottawa, Canada, while launching a double-decker bus, wrapped in vibrant imagery of Uganda’s mountain gorillas, wildlife, landscapes and the Rwenzori Marathon.
The branded bus was launched on June 1, during an event that took place at Infinity Convention Centre in Canada.

The Canadian bus known as Lady Dive which was branded with Ugandan tourism attractions to showcase the beauty of the Pearl of Africa as part of the branding and marketing strategy to increase visibility and drive the tourism numbers from Canada to Uganda

Guests in Canada being treated to Ugandan cuisines including a rolex
It also targets to increase the average tourist’s length of stay to over 10 nights from 7.6 nights, as well as increasing the average inbound expenditure per leisure tourist to $2,500 (sh9m) from $1,550 (sh5.5m). The strategy also intends to increase tourism’s direct contribution to total tax revenue to 4.2% from 2.1%, as well as increase domestic tourism expenditure to Sh5.3 trillion from Sh3.6 trillion.
In April this year (2026), Kajik led a team of 11 travel influencers from Canada, comprising Canadian leading tour operators, travel agents and media personalities who traversed Uganda for 10 days.
They were immersed in captivating adventure, video and picture moments that were subsequently broadcast and published in the Canadian press, among other media platforms, to showcase Uganda's beauty.
Juliana Kagwa, the UTB chief executive officer, reiterated that tourism is aligned to the Fourth National Development Plan (NDP IV) as well as the 15-year tenfold growth strategy as one of the priority investment areas to drive the envisaged double-digit economic growth for Uganda.
Meanwhile, the economic and commercial diplomacy handbook provides for all Uganda's Missions abroad and the ministry headquarters to market Uganda's key growth sectors.
The strategy recognises Missions abroad as strategic agents for attraction of opportunities in the key growth sectors of the country, such as tourism, agro-industrialisation, mineral development, science and technology for accelerated economic growth in the next 15 years.