On Aug. 1, the Chinese government announced that it would be suspending all individual permits for travel to Taiwan, forcing Chinese citizens hoping to visit the country to join officially approved tour groups instead.
The move is widely seen as an attempted political maneuver to damage Taiwan’s economy ahead of the January 2020 elections.
While Taiwan is likely to see a major dip in tourism from China in the coming months, there are reasons to be optimistic, as the sudden drop in Chinese visitors will make Taiwan’s popular tourist destinations less crowded.
Japanese website Zakzak is encouraging Japanese vacationers to consider visiting Taiwan in 2019 on account of decreased crowds and potential travel deals offered by hotels and tour operators to make up for losses.
Now is a “great chance” to visit Taiwan, which is regularly a top destination for Japanese tourists.
In 2013, there were 1.24 million Japanese visitors to Taiwan, but by 2017 that number had increased to 1.9 million, reports Zakzak.
That number is likely to continue increasing in the years ahead.
This year, during the high summer travel season of July 15 to Aug. 31, Taiwan expects to see around 240,000 visitors from Japan, which is an 8.3 percent increase over the same period in 2018.
According to Zakzak, many Japanese travel agencies report that Taiwan is consistently a top choice for customers looking to book vacations.
The island's geographic proximity, relative safety, low-cost travel options, and welcoming attitude towards Japanese visitors make it an ideal destination for short trips.
Tourism Observer
Showing posts with label Chinese visitors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinese visitors. Show all posts
Tuesday, 6 August 2019
Monday, 23 April 2018
NORTH KOREA: 32 Tourists Dead In Tour Bus Accident
Chinese tourists have been involved in a major road accident in North Korea and there are a large number of casualties, China's foreign ministry said.
Diplomats rushed to the scene of the accident in North Hwanghae province, which happened on Sunday evening, the ministry added, without saying how many people had either been injured or killed.
The Working Group of the Chinese Embassy in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, accompanied by the head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, rushed to the scene of the incident.
The Chinese Embassy in North Korea was informed by the DPRK that a serious traffic accident occurred on North Korea's Huanghai Road at night, causing heavy casualties to Chinese tourists, the statement said, adding that relevant details are currently being verified.
The ministry explained that an emergency mechanism has been put in place and the government is sparing no effort to investigate,
The accident involved a group of Chinese travel company staff, near an area of a roadway which is under construction.
Chinese state television's English-language channel tweeted that a tour bus had fallen off a bridge, killing more than 30 people, but later deleted the tweet.
State television's main Chinese language news channel later showed images of a crashed blue bus with its wheels in the air, in footage taken in pouring rain in the dark.
It showed at least one person being treated in hospital, but also gave no details of casualties.
In a separate statement, China's health ministry said it was sending a team of medical experts along with equipment and drugs to North Korea to help treat survivors.
North Hwanghae province borders South Korea.
North Korea is a popular tourist destination for Chinese, especially from north-eastern China.
Chinese MFA spokesperson Lu Kang later on Monday reported that 32 Chinese nationals and four North Koreans were killed in the accident, adding that an additional two PRC citizens were in a critical condition due to serious injury.
South Korean think tank the Korea Maritime Institute estimates tourism generates about $US44 million in annual revenue for North Korea.
About 80 per cent of all North Korea's foreign tourists are Chinese, it said.
China said more than 237,000 Chinese visited in 2012, but it stopped publishing the statistics in 2013.
Tourism Observer
Diplomats rushed to the scene of the accident in North Hwanghae province, which happened on Sunday evening, the ministry added, without saying how many people had either been injured or killed.
The Working Group of the Chinese Embassy in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, accompanied by the head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, rushed to the scene of the incident.
The Chinese Embassy in North Korea was informed by the DPRK that a serious traffic accident occurred on North Korea's Huanghai Road at night, causing heavy casualties to Chinese tourists, the statement said, adding that relevant details are currently being verified.
The ministry explained that an emergency mechanism has been put in place and the government is sparing no effort to investigate,
The accident involved a group of Chinese travel company staff, near an area of a roadway which is under construction.
Chinese state television's English-language channel tweeted that a tour bus had fallen off a bridge, killing more than 30 people, but later deleted the tweet.
State television's main Chinese language news channel later showed images of a crashed blue bus with its wheels in the air, in footage taken in pouring rain in the dark.
It showed at least one person being treated in hospital, but also gave no details of casualties.
In a separate statement, China's health ministry said it was sending a team of medical experts along with equipment and drugs to North Korea to help treat survivors.
North Hwanghae province borders South Korea.
North Korea is a popular tourist destination for Chinese, especially from north-eastern China.
Chinese MFA spokesperson Lu Kang later on Monday reported that 32 Chinese nationals and four North Koreans were killed in the accident, adding that an additional two PRC citizens were in a critical condition due to serious injury.
South Korean think tank the Korea Maritime Institute estimates tourism generates about $US44 million in annual revenue for North Korea.
About 80 per cent of all North Korea's foreign tourists are Chinese, it said.
China said more than 237,000 Chinese visited in 2012, but it stopped publishing the statistics in 2013.
Tourism Observer
Monday, 17 July 2017
USA: One Million Chinese Visited USA 2016, Surpassing Brazilians, Mexicans And Canadians
China is one of the fastest growing international market for New York City as nearly one million Chinese visited the Big Apple in 2016, said Fred Dixon, president and CEO of NYC & Company, the city's tourism marketer.
China is still one of the brightest spot on the horizon in terms of potential growth, said Dixon in response to a question at a press conference held Wednesday morning at the newly launched Whitby Hotel in Manhattan midtown.
He said businesses across the city, including hotels, cultural institutions and restaurants, are turning to Chinese travellers, many of them have started offering Chinese language tours, and hot tea, slippers and other amenities.
In order to attract more Chinese visitors, NYC has also expanded its footprint in China by enhancing cooperation with its local partners and more presence on the country's social media, he said.
According to NYC & Company's statistics, over 950,000 Chinese visited NYC in 2016, surpassing Brazilians and Canadians in the ranks of tourists to the city.
That represents a sevenfold increase since 2007.
Only visitors from Britain outnumbered the Chinese in 2016, but their total of about 1.2 million has not grown since 2007.
Tourism Observer
www.tourismobserver.com
China is still one of the brightest spot on the horizon in terms of potential growth, said Dixon in response to a question at a press conference held Wednesday morning at the newly launched Whitby Hotel in Manhattan midtown.
He said businesses across the city, including hotels, cultural institutions and restaurants, are turning to Chinese travellers, many of them have started offering Chinese language tours, and hot tea, slippers and other amenities.
In order to attract more Chinese visitors, NYC has also expanded its footprint in China by enhancing cooperation with its local partners and more presence on the country's social media, he said.
According to NYC & Company's statistics, over 950,000 Chinese visited NYC in 2016, surpassing Brazilians and Canadians in the ranks of tourists to the city.
That represents a sevenfold increase since 2007.
Only visitors from Britain outnumbered the Chinese in 2016, but their total of about 1.2 million has not grown since 2007.
Tourism Observer
www.tourismobserver.com
Tuesday, 16 May 2017
VIETNAM: Fake Tours Or Zero Dollar Tours Depriving Vietnam Of Tourism Revenue And Killing Tourism
Zero Dollar Tours mean a tour that costs nothing except for the airfare. These tours, while not exclusively made up of Chinese travellers, often include a significant number of them.
As they say, there’s no such thing as a free lunch, and zero dollar tours are no exception. Tourists, instead of seeing beautiful places and enjoying luxurious hotels, are taken to shopping malls and gifts shops.
There the visitors are persuaded, or sometimes forced, to buy items at inflated prices.
The tour companies get kickbacks from the shops, and in doing so can afford to keep running the tours. Worse still, the shops are often Chinese-owned and will almost always take cash exclusively.
The whole business revolving around the zero dollar tour concept leaves little room for local firms, while local government loses out on massive tax revenue.
The businesses and government aren’t the only losers in this game. The biggest losers are the tourists. Everyone joining in is doing so to save money. However, to their horror, the unwitting victims end up shelling out more on overpriced than they would have spent on a regular package tour.
For many tourists the scam leaves painful memories, and some vow never to return. A shame really, because they didn’t have a chance to see the sights, forced to go from shop to shop, treated as cash-cows.
Every once in a while stories surface of tourists abandoned on the street by their guides, the result of being unwilling to spend enough.
Some unfortunate tourists were held hostage by the very tour companies they entrusted their holidays with.
Many said they were taken to shopping malls instead of going out for promised sight-seeing; some were even threatened by their tour guides. They were told if they didn’t spend enough money on gifts they wouldn’t have a place to sleep.
In September 2013, 43 Chinese tourists were held for three hours in a jewelry shop in Hong Kong. They all purchased a zero dollar tour from a company in China.
For the entire duration of the tour, they were taken to eight different shopping malls and forced to spend hundreds of dollars on gifts and other unwanted goods.
By the Thai government’s estimation, zero dollar tours cost the country US$9 billion a year. Most tourism experts will tell you the poison runs even deeper, as the damage caused to a country’s image is irreversible.
It was perhaps no coincidence that right after the Thai government shut down the shady tours the number of Chinese visitors entering Viet Nam surged.
Statistics provided by the Viet Nam National Administration for Tourism show a record number of Chinese tourists during the first three months of 2017, with nearly one million visitors, marking a 63.5 per cent increase from the same period last year.
Popular destinations including the border province of Quang Ninh and the coastal city of Da Nang welcomed tens of thousands of Chinese visitors on a monthly basis.
It is safe to assume that after Thailand’s clampdown, the dodgy companies are looking for alternative destinations.
Those who follow the news might remember pictures of seemingly endless lines of Chinese visitors queuing up at the Mong Cai Border Checkpoint to enter Viet Nam.
They may also remember reports of a large number of unusual shops, selling only to Chinese tourists while denying entry to anyone else. Numerous accounts from industry insiders revealed that these events were all part of the same sinister circle.
Tourism experts have long identified zero dollar tours as a serious threat to the country’s tourism industry, even as a form of fraud that must be stopped to protect Chinese tourists and local companies.
Many pointed out that other factors, on top of financial loss, must be taken into account.
The stress on local infrastructure networks, the impact on the environment and the negative influence the practice may have on tourists from other countries are all cause for concern.
In late March, the Quang Ninh authorities closed some 15 of the shops, a positive development in the ongoing fight against zero dollar tour companies.
However, for the future health of its tourism business, Viet Nam must take serious action to shut down the companies and individuals involved, just like the Thai government.
Inevitably, Thailand’s strong action precipitated a drop in the number of Chinese tourists, but most experts at the Bangkok summit agreed with the decision and believed it would benefit the tourism industry in the long run.
In the meantime, my Thai friends are putting on a brave face.
Those tours have plagued our industry for years. We are happy to welcome back Chinese visitors. Hopefully, this time around they won’t be on one of those rip-off tours, said a Thai tour guide.
We cannot allow the image of our country and our people to be ruined in the name of greed, a Thai tour guide said, I am confident that even without those zero dollar tours Chinese people will come back to see my beautiful country.”
Chinese visitors amounted to nearly 30 per cent of the total number of visitors to Viet Nam last year and this figure is expected to rise in the years to come.
It is of great importance that the country’s tourism authority starts working on measures to prevent the rise of zero dollar tours, not just to protect local tourism but also the image of a hospitable country and the honest, friendly people of Viet Nam.
The better name, Fake Tours
As they say, there’s no such thing as a free lunch, and zero dollar tours are no exception. Tourists, instead of seeing beautiful places and enjoying luxurious hotels, are taken to shopping malls and gifts shops.
There the visitors are persuaded, or sometimes forced, to buy items at inflated prices.
The tour companies get kickbacks from the shops, and in doing so can afford to keep running the tours. Worse still, the shops are often Chinese-owned and will almost always take cash exclusively.
The whole business revolving around the zero dollar tour concept leaves little room for local firms, while local government loses out on massive tax revenue.
The businesses and government aren’t the only losers in this game. The biggest losers are the tourists. Everyone joining in is doing so to save money. However, to their horror, the unwitting victims end up shelling out more on overpriced than they would have spent on a regular package tour.
For many tourists the scam leaves painful memories, and some vow never to return. A shame really, because they didn’t have a chance to see the sights, forced to go from shop to shop, treated as cash-cows.
Every once in a while stories surface of tourists abandoned on the street by their guides, the result of being unwilling to spend enough.
Some unfortunate tourists were held hostage by the very tour companies they entrusted their holidays with.
Many said they were taken to shopping malls instead of going out for promised sight-seeing; some were even threatened by their tour guides. They were told if they didn’t spend enough money on gifts they wouldn’t have a place to sleep.
In September 2013, 43 Chinese tourists were held for three hours in a jewelry shop in Hong Kong. They all purchased a zero dollar tour from a company in China.
For the entire duration of the tour, they were taken to eight different shopping malls and forced to spend hundreds of dollars on gifts and other unwanted goods.
By the Thai government’s estimation, zero dollar tours cost the country US$9 billion a year. Most tourism experts will tell you the poison runs even deeper, as the damage caused to a country’s image is irreversible.
It was perhaps no coincidence that right after the Thai government shut down the shady tours the number of Chinese visitors entering Viet Nam surged.
Statistics provided by the Viet Nam National Administration for Tourism show a record number of Chinese tourists during the first three months of 2017, with nearly one million visitors, marking a 63.5 per cent increase from the same period last year.
Popular destinations including the border province of Quang Ninh and the coastal city of Da Nang welcomed tens of thousands of Chinese visitors on a monthly basis.
It is safe to assume that after Thailand’s clampdown, the dodgy companies are looking for alternative destinations.
Those who follow the news might remember pictures of seemingly endless lines of Chinese visitors queuing up at the Mong Cai Border Checkpoint to enter Viet Nam.
They may also remember reports of a large number of unusual shops, selling only to Chinese tourists while denying entry to anyone else. Numerous accounts from industry insiders revealed that these events were all part of the same sinister circle.
Tourism experts have long identified zero dollar tours as a serious threat to the country’s tourism industry, even as a form of fraud that must be stopped to protect Chinese tourists and local companies.
Many pointed out that other factors, on top of financial loss, must be taken into account.
The stress on local infrastructure networks, the impact on the environment and the negative influence the practice may have on tourists from other countries are all cause for concern.
In late March, the Quang Ninh authorities closed some 15 of the shops, a positive development in the ongoing fight against zero dollar tour companies.
However, for the future health of its tourism business, Viet Nam must take serious action to shut down the companies and individuals involved, just like the Thai government.
Inevitably, Thailand’s strong action precipitated a drop in the number of Chinese tourists, but most experts at the Bangkok summit agreed with the decision and believed it would benefit the tourism industry in the long run.
In the meantime, my Thai friends are putting on a brave face.
Those tours have plagued our industry for years. We are happy to welcome back Chinese visitors. Hopefully, this time around they won’t be on one of those rip-off tours, said a Thai tour guide.
We cannot allow the image of our country and our people to be ruined in the name of greed, a Thai tour guide said, I am confident that even without those zero dollar tours Chinese people will come back to see my beautiful country.”
Chinese visitors amounted to nearly 30 per cent of the total number of visitors to Viet Nam last year and this figure is expected to rise in the years to come.
It is of great importance that the country’s tourism authority starts working on measures to prevent the rise of zero dollar tours, not just to protect local tourism but also the image of a hospitable country and the honest, friendly people of Viet Nam.
The better name, Fake Tours
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