Los Angeles Times

China suspends tourist travel to Taiwan

Citing cross-strait tensions, Beijing halts independen­t visits indefinite­ly, a setback for island’s economy.

- By Ralph Jennings Jennings is a special correspond­ent. Times staff writer Alice Su in Beijing contribute­d to this report.

TAIPEI, Taiwan — The government­s of China and Taiwan don’t talk. But more than 80,000 Chinese tourists visit Taiwan each month for an alternativ­e take on Chinese culture, making friends and stoking business, often in parts of the nearby island that other tourists usually miss.

But Beijing’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism, citing “current mainland-Taiwan relations,” announced that beginning Thursday independen­t tourists will no longer be granted permits to visit the island.

The indefinite suspension is likely to prove a major economic hit to Taiwan, as well as a blow to cultural interplay.

“They can get a deep understand­ing of Taiwan’s culture and lifestyle and broaden horizons — an important channel for knowing Taiwan,” the Taiwanese government’s Mainland Affairs Council said in a statement Wednesday.

“The council expresses deep regret toward the mainland’s suspension of independen­t travel on its own and limits on contact between our peoples.”

Independen­t Chinese tourism to Taiwan has already been shrinking, as tensions have mounted between the mainland and Taiwan, which has been selfruled since the Chinese civil war of the 1940s. China has firmly insisted that Taiwan merge with the mainland despite opinion surveys conducted by the Taiwanese government that show more than 80% of islanders prefer autonomy.

Between 2008 and 2016, the two sides opened a strong dialogue that led to more than 20 agreements, including one in 2008 that opened Taiwan to mainland Chinese tourists.

In 2015 and 2016 more than 1.3 million mainlander­s visited, according to Taiwan’s National Immigratio­n Agency. But in 2017, as political initiative­s faltered, independen­t travel declined to just over 1 million, and fell further last year to 978,000.

Group tourism also fell in 2016 by 18% as Chinese officials urged domestic travel agencies to begin steering group tours elsewhere.

Chinese tourists miffed by the suspension say their Taiwan travels left them with strong, mostly upbeat impression­s while satisfying a curiosity they had felt since reading about Taiwan as children.

“I think it’s about strong cultural and deep historic connection across” the Taiwan Strait, said Wang Tong, 37, a university employee who visited twice and hopes the suspension is brief. “Most Chinese in my generation grow up with many Taiwanese novels, drama, variety shows and songs.”

When Laura Lu visited in 2016, she went hiking in the blustery mountains of Yangmingsh­an National Park north of Taipei and got lost in a rainstorm. A Taipei taxi driver put her back on the right path and referred her to a local friend who became her guide. That encounter cemented the 49-year-old’s overall impression of Taiwan.

“Taipei people are really good, polite and courteous,” the private jet rental agent from Shanghai said. Strangers in China can be gruffer, she said, even putting a hand in the faces of inquiring strangers. In Taiwan, she says, “you ask other people where to go and they always tell you.”

Tourism bureau surveys in 2015 found 73% of selfguided tourists were “extremely satisfied” with Taiwan.

Independen­t Chinese travelers have been visiting Taiwan from 47 mainland cities — as agreed by both sides — on flights of no more than two or three hours. Adding convenienc­e, their native-language Chinese appears on signs throughout Taiwan and almost everyone on the island speaks it.

“I don’t think the people from either side have any problems getting on,” said Weng Yunchun, 44, a Beijing-based organic farmer who visited Taiwan in 2017. “It was like traveling to other cities in mainland China.”

Some tourists blog about their favorite restaurant­s, enticing more business. A Chinese blogger made one Taipei noodle bowl restaurant so popular that by 2017, diners stood outside clutching their bowls and plastic spoons for lack of seating.

Travelers also revel in religious, architectu­ral and cultural similariti­es, the result of migration from China to Taiwan that began hundreds of years ago, with its most recent wave in the 1940s.

Travelers also take home new informatio­n from Taiwan’s newspapers, news websites and television channels, all free of censorship unlike on the mainland.

Politics began disrupting relations in 2016 after Tsai Ing-wen became president of Taiwan. Like much of the public, Tsai rejects Beijing’s goal of unificatio­n as well as its premise that both sides belong to a single China. Her predecesso­r from 2008 to 2016 had accepted the condition.

The mainland government answered Tsai by flying military aircraft near Taiwan and enticing Taiwan’s diplomatic allies to sever relations and recognize Beijing instead.

Beijing also thinned the number of group tours to the island.

A prolonged suspension of independen­t travel will cost Taiwan a portion of the 2.2% growth expected this year in its $589-billion gross domestic product, as the service sector founders, said Liang Kuo-yuan, president of Taipei-based think tank Polaris Research Institute.

“Mainland China was motivated by wanting to show that ‘in addition to military threats we can actually use the economy as resistance,’ ” Liang said.

State-run China Central Television said on its Weibo social media website Wednesday that the pause in independen­t travel permits came because “risks are increasing” for travelers as Taiwan’s January 2020 elections approach. Tsai is due to run against a Chinafrien­dly populist mayor.

“It’s said that tourism numbers will drop by [700,000 to] 800,000,” the Weibo account stated. “Taiwanese tourism industry, are you guys still OK?”

Chinese tourists “should be allowed to join more & more travelers from around the world in experienci­ng a country where freedom, openness & tolerance are the order of the day,” Foreign Minister Joseph Wu retorted in a tweet. “What’s to fear?”

 ?? David Chang EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? THE NUMBER of mainlander­s visiting Taiwan has been declining steadily in recent years, to 978,000 in 2018.
David Chang EPA/Shuttersto­ck THE NUMBER of mainlander­s visiting Taiwan has been declining steadily in recent years, to 978,000 in 2018.

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