Deputy Speaker, the hon member is quite correct with regard to what we are experiencing with the geographic spread. Therefore, we have the specific programme that focuses on the six least visited provinces - packages that we market through South African Tourism with the co-operation of the two operators to make sure that we also attract visitors to the six least visited provinces. The most visited provinces are the Western Cape, Gauteng and Mpumalanga.
There is also the responsibility on the provinces themselves to find that unique niche. The hon member referred to the Northern Cape. I must actually commend the Northern Cape because they realised that they cannot compete in terms of what we generally market South Africa on - the so-called safari destinations, wildlife landscapes - and what they did was to build themselves a reputation with regard to adventure tourism. They are doing very, very well and hosting some international events. So, there is a responsibility on the six least visited provinces to also find out what their best products are to market.
Two initiatives that I would like to mention briefly from the side of the government are the Tourism Enterprise Programme - a partnership between government and the private sector to assist with advice, but also funding, for small, medium and micro businesses, especially in the six least visited provinces; and then the incentives programme, a few hundred million rand at the Department of Trade and Industry, DTI, will now be transferred to tourism.
The hon member may have seen that yesterday we opened the new cable car aerial way in the province of North West, a cable car right in the bushveld. About 30% of the project was done with funding from government. That is one of the initiatives to make sure that we not only fund projects in the three big provinces in terms of tourism.