The Pak Banker

Beijing airports expect surge in flights during Spring Festival

- ISLAMABAD

Two major airports in Beijing will see the number of incoming and outgoing flights surge 44 percent during the Spring Festival travel rush compared with the same period a year ago.

It is estimated that 62,000 flights will arrive at or depart from the Beijing Capital Internatio­nal Airport and the Beijing Daxing Internatio­nal Airport during the 40-daylong travel rush, according to the North China Regional Administra­tion of the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China.

A total of 1,241 inbound and outbound flights were expected to be made by the two airports, on the first day of this year's Spring Festival travel rush, said the administra­tion.

The two airports are expecting the peak-travel period to start on January 14, with the daily inbound and outbound flights handled by these airports topping 1,700, Xinhua reported.

Large airlines, including China Southern Airlines, will resume the operation of internatio­nal flight routes at the Beijing Daxing Internatio­nal Airport starting on January 17.

In Tokyo's Asakusa tourist district, caricaturi­st Masashi Higashitan­i is dusting off his Chinese as he prepares for an influx of travellers after Beijing ends inbound quarantine rules.

"We used to say 'ni hao' all the time," he said with a laugh as he whipped up a portrait in minutes.

Nearly 9.6 million Chinese visited Japan in 2019, the biggest group of foreign tourists by far and a massive leap from the 450,000 who came in 2003.

Higashitan­i estimates around 20 percent of his customers were from China before the pandemic, and he and his employees picked up Chinese phrases from those visitors and each other. He had to downsize and let staff go during the pandemic, so he is thrilled about the expected wave of arrivals, even though he admits some apprehensi­on too.

"I wonder if an influx of too many of them might overwhelm our capacity. I'm also worried that we need to be more careful about anti-virus measures," he told AFP.

Travellers arriving back in China will no longer need to quarantine from Sunday, removing one of the main barriers to travel for the country's population. The move, announced in late December, sparked a frenzy of trip planning, with searches spiking for Macau, Hong Kong, Japan, Thailand and South Korea.

Chinese tourists also made up about a third of all pre-pandemic foreign visitors to South Korea and were among the top three groups visiting Thailand and Indonesia. At a crepe stand in Seoul, Son Kyung-rak said he was already making plans to deal with a flood of tourists from China.

"We're looking to hire and preparing to stock up," the 24-year-old told AFP in Seoul's popular downtown Myeongdong district. "Chinese tourists are our main customers, so the more the merrier." But authoritie­s in Seoul are more cautious.

The slump in Chinese visitors "has been a blow to our tourism industry", said Yun Ji-suk, an official from South Korea's culture ministry. "But now is not the time to be active in tourism marketing, due to the ongoing Covid situation."

China's sudden lifting of pandemic restrictio­ns has led to a massive wave of infections, but Beijing's refusal to share informatio­n means the scale of the surge is unclear.

It has been enough to spook government­s around the world, with some countries even banning arrivals from China. Seoul is capping flights from China, and travellers from the mainland, Hong Kong and Macau will have to test negative before travel. Mainland visitors will also be tested on arrival.

Japan has announced similar rules for China, although Hong Kong and Macau travellers are exempt.

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