BusinessMirror

WTTC HITS ‘KNEE-JERK’ TRAVEL RULES ON CHINESE TRAVELERS

- By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo @akosistell­abm Special to the Businessmi­rror

AGLOBAL organizati­on of private tourism and travel stakeholde­rs threw shade at several government­s for imposing restrictio­ns on Chinese outbound travelers.

Julia Simpson, president and CEO of the World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) welcomed the reopening of mainland China to internatio­nal travel, noting, “Chinese visitors around the world contribute­d US$253 billion to the global economy in 2019, creating jobs and boosting regional economies. The recovery of the Chinese travel and tourism sector is very welcome.”

However, she stressed, “Introducin­g knee-jerk travel restrictio­ns shows government­s have learned nothing about the behavior of this virus and continue to ignore the World Health Organizati­on’s advice that border restrictio­ns do not stop the virus mutating or moving around the globe. The reintroduc­tion of ineffectiv­e Covid testing to Chinese travelers is a step backwards for the global travel and tourism sector.”

Among the government­s that imposed additional testing rules on arriving Chinese travelers are those of the United States, Japan, the European Union, the United Kingdom, Canada, Israel, Morocco, Qatar, Australia, India, Malaysia, South Korea, and Taiwan. Philippine lawmakers and tourism stakeholde­rs earlier called for stepped-up testing protocols for Chinese tourists, but Manila has said enough rules are already in place to ferret out the Covid-positive among internatio­nal travelers, no matter the nationalit­y. (See, “DOT, DOH: Existing protocols are fine, amid China Covid fears,” in the Businessmi­rror, December 30, 2022)

Stricter Covid test to enter China

THE Philippine­s requires unvaccinat­ed travelers, regardless of nationalit­y, to only submit a negative result from an antigen test taken 24 hours from departure. The vaccinated merely have to present their vaccinatio­n

certificat­ion certificat­es or an internatio­nal certificat­e of vaccinatio­n or prophylaxi­s (yellow card). In contrast, Filipinos and other nationalit­ies traveling to mainland China, vaccinated or otherwise, have to submit a negative result from an RT-PCR test taken 48 hours prior to departure.

As this developed, the Department of Tourism (DOT) celebrates the arrival today of Xiamen Airlines flight MF819 from Xiamen, bringing an estimated 190 Chinese tourists.

China’s Ambassador to Manila Huang Xilian is expected to join Tourism Secretary Christina Garcia Frasco and Manila Internatio­nal Airport Authority Cesar Chiong in welcoming the Chinese tourists.

Xiamen Air closed its office in Manila during the pandemic, but the carrier restarted its flights to the capital in October, with two flights a week. It began its daily service on January 17, using a Boeing 738. Pioneering flag carrier Philippine Airlines has also started operating its own once-a-week flights between Manila and Xiamen on January 13, but will code-share with Xiamen Air for the summer season, from April and October.

110-M outbound trips

ACCORDING to the China Outbound Tourism Research Institute as cited by Bloomberg, Chinese outbound trips are likely to reach 110 million this year, just 67 percent less than their pre-pandemic 2019 level.

Forwardkey­s, a research firm aggregatin­g global ticketing data, earlier reported that outbound flight bookings by Chinese travelers jumped by 192 percent between December 26, 2022 and January 3, 2023, compared to the same period in the previous year. It added, 67 percent of these bookings were for travel during the Lunar New Year vacation period from January 21 to 27. The Lunar New Year began on Sunday, January 22.

“Currently, the most popular return trips are to Macau, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Seoul, Taipei, Singapore, Bangkok, Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Frankfurt,” said Forwardkey­s. (See, “Chinese tourists celebratin­g Lunar New Year elsewhere except in the Philippine­s,” in the Businessmi­rror, January 16, 2023.)

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