China Daily (Hong Kong)

China makes Belgrade tourism fair debut

- A volunteer (above)

passes out printed schedules to passengers at the Chongqing Railway Station in 2001.

The photo taken in January (right) shows a robot named Xiao Lu assisting travelers at the Guangzhou South Railway Station in Guangdong province.

Travel services are improving with China’s economic and scientific progress.

uates 136 economies based on their capacity to facilitate the flow of goods over borders and to their destinatio­n.

BELGRADE — For the first time, China took part in the Belgrade Internatio­nal Tourism Fair that opened on Thursday.

Serbian officials and tour operators saw this as another signal — along with visa liberaliza­tion and possible direct flights — that the number of Chinese tourists to Serbia may soon increase notably.

The annual fair took place from Feb 23 to 26, with 1,100 exhibitors, local, regional and internatio­nal tour operators, tourism associatio­ns, hotels and airline companies from 56 countries participat­ing.

It was officially opened by Serbian Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic and Rasim Ljajic, the country’s minister of trade, tourism and telecommun­ications.

Speaking at the fair, Vucic said Serbia made over 1 billion euros ($1.06 billion) in profit from tourism last year because it realized it had underestim­ated its potential in the past and decided to act. One of the strategies, he added, was to attract more visitors from China.

“In 2016, the number of Chinese tourists increased by 29 percent. We expect more of them because I expect that one Chinese airliner will soon establish a direct flight from Belgrade to Beijing,” he said.

“This will mean — along with the visa-free regime — a huge number of tourists.”

Vucic said Serbia plans to make arrangemen­ts with neighborin­g countries, such as Montenegro and Hungary, to present a joint offer to Chinese tour operators.

Ljajic noted the Belgrade fair has grown into the biggest tourism fair in the region and stressed the importance of having China and Russia as first-time participan­ts.

In an interview, Liu Cheng, director of the Budapest branch of the China National Tourism Administra­tion, said the branch was founded last March in Budapest to promote China as a tourist destinatio­n among central and eastern Europe- percent an countries, and to establish tourism connection­s between China and these countries, including Serbia.

“These years we have seen a rapid growth of Chinese outbound tourists to CEE countries, with an annual number of 800,000 tourists,” Liu said. “Among these countries, the Czech Republic is the most popular.”

Liu said that although not many Chinese tourists visit Serbia, the number is growing by 20 to 30 percent every year.

Serbia and China implemente­d a visa-liberaliza­tion program in January.

“I think it’s important that Serbia promotes itself in China so that Chinese people will get to know more about this country and, gradually, Serbia will become a popular destinatio­n,” he said.

Milica Cubrilo, secretary of tourism in Serbia’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said that Serbia has a lot to offer tourists.

These include Belgrade and its surroundin­gs, mountain resorts, spas, numerous festivals and traditions. The hotels, restaurant­s and tour guides have gradually started to adapt to the requiremen­ts of Chinese tourists, she said.

Almost 43,000 Chinese tourists visited last year. While the number isn’t big for a population of China’s size, it is encouragin­g for Siberia. Only 12,000 Chinese arrived in 2011, she added.

Biljana Radulovic, director of Top Tours, said her company made the first attempt to cooperate with Chinese tour operators on bringing tourists to Serbia by printing a brochure that was presented at an internatio­nal tourism fair in Shanghai last year.

the increase in Chinese tourists to Serbia in 2016.

 ?? LIANG XU / XINHUA ??
LIANG XU / XINHUA

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