
Maharat for Tourism e-learning hub by SPARK landing in UAE supported by Google.org
Abu Dhabi - SPARK, in partnership with EYouth and with support from Google.org, has launched the Maharat for Tourism E-Learning Hub in Abu Dhabi, UAE.
Abu Dhabi welcomed nearly 24 million visitors in 2023, confirming its role not just as a global destination but also as a key player in reshaping tourism in ways that are more inclusive, digital, and environmentally responsible. The launch of the Maharat for Tourism Hub comes as the UAE rolls out its National Tourism Strategy 2031, which forms part of the country's broader 'Projects of the 50' agenda to diversify the economy and position the UAE among the world's top tourist destinations.
With tourism set to contribute significantly to the country's GDP and attract billions in investment, the strategy focuses on four core areas: creating a unified national tourism identity, diversifying tourism products, building local capabilities, and increasing investment across all tourism sectors. The Maharat for Tourism programme supports these ambitions by equipping young people and small business owners with the tools and training needed to grow the industry in a sustainable and future-ready way.
'The UAE is steadily advancing its national efforts to develop innovative and sustainable tourism while strengthening collaboration with key local and international stakeholders in the tourism sector. That's why Maharat for Tourism plays a vital role in driving these efforts forward,' said Christel Bultman, CEO of SPARK.
The Maharat for Tourism E-Learning Hub offers tailored, free training across multiple areas, including sustainable tourism strategy, SME management, AI and digital tools, event planning, and soft skills. It also provides specific courses for policymakers, helping governments design tourism frameworks that balance growth with social and environmental responsibility.
Encouraging private-sector investment remains a key pillar of the UAE's strategy, with government incentives driving commitment to areas such as renewable energy, waste management, and eco-friendly transport. Just as important is the country's growing recognition of community-based tourism, where local communities play an active role in shaping tourism initiatives. The Hub reflects this by promoting inclusive approaches and ensuring that training materials speak to both economic and social priorities.
Running until the end of 2025, the Maharat for Tourism programme aims to support 25,000 job seekers and entrepreneurs across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar, Jordan, Tunisia, Lebanon, and the Palestinian territories. In addition to the online hub, the programme will deliver workshops and events that help learners translate their training into opportunity.
With the support of Google.org, SPARK has also developed the Maharat for Tourism E-learning Hub, a dynamic online training platform that provides specialised curriculum tailored to different segments of the tourism industry. These include courses on government tourism strategies and policies for policymakers, as well as courses designed for small business owners on managing SMEs in the tourism sector. Additionally, there are modules on experiential tourism operations and event planning and design, aimed at job seekers looking to enter the tourism industry
'At Google, we believe in the power of technology to unlock opportunities for everyone. SPARK's Maharat for Tourism e-learning hub supported by Google.org, aims to equip young people and entrepreneurs with digital skills for the growing tourism sector, contributing to the UAE's tourism goals and creating economic opportunities.' Marie De Ducla, Google Sector Lead - Travel, Retail, Consumer Goods & Services in MENA.
About SPARK:
SPARK is an international non-governmental development organisation active throughout the Middle East, North and Sub-Saharan Africa, and Europe. For over 30 years, SPARK has been creating pathways for young people to rebuild their futures. SPARK provides opportunities for youth, particularly women and refugees, to study, work and grow their own businesses in fragile communities by providing higher (vocational) education scholarships, entrepreneurship development and SME support. All SPARK's programs are founded in close collaboration with local partner organisations.
About Google.org:
Google.org, is Google's philanthropic arm that is committed to applying the best of Google's innovation, research, and resources to address some of the world's biggest challenges. Google.org supports nonprofits and social impact organisations working to create a more equitable and accessible future. Key focus areas include expanding knowledge, skills and learning, advancing scientific progress, and building resilient communities. By leveraging technology and data-driven insights, Google.org strives to empower organizations to scale their impact and create lasting positive change for people around the world.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Middle East Eye
9 hours ago
- Middle East Eye
Exclusive: US warns UK and France not to recognise Palestinian state
The US has warned Britain and France against recognising a Palestinian state at a UN conference later this month, Middle East Eye can reveal. France and Saudi Arabia are set to co-host a major UN conference on the two-state solution beginning on 17 June in New York. France is reportedly gearing up to unilaterally recognise a Palestinian state at the conference. MEE understands that France has been lobbying Britain to do so as well. French officials believe the British government is onboard with the plan, according to French media. But Washington privately begun to warn Britain and France against unilaterally recognising Palestine, sources with knowledge of the matter in the British Foreign Office told MEE. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters At the same time Arab states are urging them to proceed with the move, sources said. In late May, UN member states held consultations in preparation for the conference during which the Arab Group urged states to recognise Palestinian statehood. The Arab Group said they would measure the success of the conference by whether significant states recognise Palestine, Foreign Office sources added. 'No grounds for US interference' Approached for comment, the Foreign Office pointed MEE to Foreign Secretary David Lammy's statement on 20 May in which he reaffirmed UK support for a two-state solution. Lammy has publicly opposed unilateral recognition, insisting earlier this year that the UK would only recognise a Palestinian state "when we know it's going to happen and it's in sight". But in late April, Lammy acknowledged for the first time that Britain was in discussion with France and Saudi Arabia on the topic. Israel threatens UK and France with West Bank annexation if they recognise Palestine Read More » Chris Doyle, director of the Council for Arab-British Understanding, told MEE: 'There are no legitimate grounds for the US to interfere in a sovereign decision by Britain and France to recognise another state. 'A Franco-British recognition would be to acknowledge the Palestinian right to nationhood and to be equal partners in any future negotiations with Israel.' Doyle added: 'Based on precedent with this British government, US objection to recognition would be more likely to have an impact on Britain than on France.' But the American president is unpredictable. 'What really counts is what President Trump himself thinks,' Doyle said. 'Opposing unilateral recognition is an existing American position. 'But if I was in Downing Street, I would be asking what does the president himself believe - and how will he react?' If France and Britain go ahead with the move, they will become the first G7 nations to recognise a Palestinian state. Alon Pinkas, who advised four Israeli foreign ministers, told MEE on Monday that French President Emmanuel Macron's push to recognise Palestinian statehood 'is serious and has the backing of most of the European Union and Saudi Arabia'. The move would cause a political earthquake, since both France and Britain are among Israel's most important historic allies. Exclusive: UK considered Palestine recognition in 2014 if Israel built settlements now being planned Read More » And Israel has signalled it would not take the move lying down. Last week Ron Dermer, Israel's strategic affairs minister, threatened Britain and France that Israel may annex parts of the West Bank if they recognise a Palestinian state, according to Israeli newspaper Haaretz. MEE revealed earlier this month that Britain privately decided in 2014 it would consider recognising a Palestinian state if Israel advanced with the contentious E1 settlement project. Israel is currently poised to move forward with the settlement plan, which would effectively split the occupied West Bank in two. Meanwhile, domestic pressure is ramping up in Britain. 'Starmer is facing significant levels of anger throughout the entirety of the Labour party and the British public,' Doyle said, 'even in circles that would ordinarily support the Israeli government.' Several MPs told MEE last month they believe the UK must recognise a Palestinian state immediately. Labour MP Uma Kumaran, a member of Britain's Foreign Affairs Select Committee, said: "This government was elected on a manifesto that promised to recognise Palestine as a step towards a just and lasting peace. "I strongly support the recognition of a Palestinian state, and I have raised this repeatedly in parliament, on the Foreign Affairs Committee and with ministers."

Middle East Eye
a day ago
- Middle East Eye
Greta Thunberg joins activists sailing from Italy to Gaza to break Israeli siege
A ship operated by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition on Sunday set off from Sicily to the Gaza Strip carrying "symbolic" aid to break the Israeli siege on the Palestinian enclave. Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg, Game of Thrones actor Liam Cunningham, and Franco-Palestinian MEP Rima Hassan were among the 12-person crew of the Madleen, which is expected to take seven days to reach Gaza. Journalist Andrea Legni reported from aboard the ship that they were carrying "fruit juices, milk, rice, tinned food and protein bars donated by hundreds of Catania residents". The barrels of relief were described by the organisers as "limited amounts, though symbolic". 'We are doing this because no matter what odds we are against, we have to keep trying, because the moment we stop trying is when we lose our humanity,' Thunberg told reporters at a news conference in the port of Catania. Read more: Greta Thunberg joins activists sailing from Italy to Gaza to break Israeli siege The Madleen, carrying aid from Italy to Gaza (Freedom Flotilla Coalition)


Middle East Eye
3 days ago
- Middle East Eye
UK: Cambridge students relaunch pro-Palestine encampment
Students at the UK's University of Cambridge have relaunched a protest encampment outside Trinity College, one of its largest and wealthiest colleges, calling on the institution to disclose and divest from companies complicit in Israel's war on Gaza. The group behind the protest, Cambridge for Palestine (C4P), is demanding the University 'take urgent steps' to end what it calls its 'moral and material complicity in Israel's genocide of Palestinians.' C4P says Trinity College holds investments in companies such as Elbit Systems, Caterpillar, L3Harris Technologies, and Barclays - despite the university's previous commitment to review its 'responsible investment' policy following a similar months-long encampment last year. In a statement, C4P said the renewed protest came after 'months of student, faculty, and community frustration' over the University's failure to honour those pledges. The group outlined four core demands, including full disclosure of financial ties to companies implicated in Israeli violations of international law, full divestment from them, and reinvestment in Palestinian communities. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters This includes support for Palestinian students and academics at Cambridge, rebuilding higher education institutions in Gaza, and forming partnerships with Palestinian universities. 'Repressive measures' C4P also demanded the need for the university to "protect the academic freedoms and safety of all University of Cambridge affiliates," as well as reversing "targeted anti-protest policies that restrict pro-Palestine speech". In March, the University was granted a High Court order barring pro-Palestine actions from three locations on its campus until the end of July 2025 - a reduced version of its original bid to secure a five-year ban on 27 February, which was rejected in court. "This is the first major action on Cambridge's campus after the university enacted repressive measures to criminalise protest for Palestine," a student camper, who wished to remain anonymous for security reasons, told Middle East Eye. "We know that our acts of protest come with risks of further repression and targeting, yet the escalation of genocide demands our action. There are no universities left in Gaza. We will not deterred when our university funds mass murder." 'So long as Cambridge and its colleges remain backers of the Zionist project, we will continue to return' - C4P representative Cambridge University is made up of 31 self-governing colleges which operate autonomously, including in their financial investments. Many of them have faced protests over their investments since the launch of Israel's war on Gaza in October 2023. On 20 May, King's College announced it would divest millions from the arms industry and companies complicit in "the occupation of Ukraine and Palestinian territories," becoming the first Oxford or Cambridge college to take such measures. "Cambridge for Palestine is here to show the University that we are back," C4P representative said in a statement. "So long as Cambridge and its colleges remain backers of the Zionist project, we will continue to return and disrupt the University's violence shrouded in so-called normalcy."