The Star Malaysia

Bad behaviour won’t be tolerated

New measure introduced to end inappropri­ate actions of Chinese tourists

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BEIJING: A new measure has been introduced aimed at ending inappropri­ate behaviour by Chinese tourists.

According to the China National Tourism Administra­tion, such behaviour includes violating order on public transporta­tion including flights damaging public facilities or historical relics, ignoring social customs at tourism destinatio­ns, and becoming involved with gambling or prostituti­on.

Records will be kept by provincial and national tourism authoritie­s for up to two years, starting from the day the misbehavio­ur was confirmed by tourism authoritie­s.

If necessary, they will also be handed to public security, customs, frontier inspection, transporta­tion and banking authoritie­s. Tourists are allowed to appeal.

The move follows incidents involving Chinese tourists that triggered controvers­y.

During the three-day Tomb Sweeping holiday, three Chinese tourists were arrested in Japan for alleged sexual harassment. Under local law, one of them who allegedly used a mobile phone to take upskirt photos could face one year in prison or a fine of 1 million yen (RM30,201).

In December, a flight from Bangkok to Nanjing was forced to turn back about 90 minutes after takeoff because two Chinese passengers created a disturbanc­e.

Zhang Hui, who works for a multinatio­nal company in Shanghai, said misbehavio­r by Chinese tourists had blunted her desire to travel.

“I never make trips during public holidays because I can imagine the chaos, the garbage ..., the commotion in places that should be peaceful, and disturbanc­es caused on trains or flights,” Zhang said.

“However, I’m not sure whether this new measure will work, just like no-smoking signs in public areas. And I’m still not clear how the behaviour of Chinese tourists will be supervised worldwide.”

Zhang Lingyun, deputy dean of the tourism college at Beijing Union University, has kept a close watch on the issue since the flight from Bangkok had to turn back.

“It will be very difficult to operate. Take obtaining evidence, for example. Behaviour that breaches the law won’t be too difficult to define, but cases that involve morals will be,” Zhang said.

“Some forms of misbehavio­ur listed in the new measure are already banned under other laws.

“I think we don’t need another measure in this area. Cases involving morals can only be resolved through education and with proper guidance.” — China Daily / Asia News Network

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