China Daily (Hong Kong)

Yunnan to clean up tourism industry

- By LI YINGQING in Kunming and ZHAO XINYING in Beijing

Yunnan province will introduce 22 measures to clean up the local tourism industry, the provincial tourism administra­tive authority said on Monday.

The measures, which will come into effect on April 15, include forbidding forced shopping and overly cheap tours, punishing fraud targeted at tourists, and strengthen­ing regulation of tour guides via an online informatio­n and evaluation system.

Yu Fan, director of the Yunnan Tourism Developmen­t Commission, said the measures aim to eradicate the deep-rooted problems within the tourism industry.

Yunnan has been a popular destinatio­n for tourists both from China and abroad. How- ever, in recent years, numerous incidents of tourists being swindled, abused, beaten or forced by tour guides to purchase overpriced commoditie­s at designated stores have been reported by the media.

In August, several provincial authoritie­s formed a task force and conducted inspection­s in cities known to be tourism hot spots, including Kunming, Dali and Lijiang.

The provincial government also released regulation­s aimed at improving the tourism industry, but they were largely ineffectiv­e.

Ruan Chengfa, the governor of Yunnan, said during the annual session of the top legislatur­e earlier this month that the province would work to design a system that strengthen­s supervisio­n to address problems within the tourism industry.

The new measures to regu- late the tourism industry are “the strictest ever”, according to industry insiders.

Yu said several authoritie­s — including tourism administra­tion, commerce, commodity prices, tax and public security — will work together to prevent travel agencies or tour guides from designatin­g specific shopping venues for tourists or arranging activities with hidden payments.

“In addition, travel agencies luring tourists with prices lower than costs will be suspended from business for a set period, with those who continue to sell overly cheap tours after suspension losing their business licenses,” he added.

Ren Jianzheng, chairman of the Yunnan Chamber of Tourism, welcomed the measures.

“A chaotic tourism industry harms all involved — travel agencies, tour guides and tourists,” Ren said, adding that a transparen­t, orderly industry, which is expected to be brought about after the implementa­tion of the new measures, will benefit all.

A chaotic tourism industry harms all involved — travel agencies, tour guides and tourists.” Ren Jianzheng, chairman of the Yunnan Chamber of Tourism

Contact the writers at zhaoxinyin­g@ chinadaily.com.cn

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China