Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Choosing to stay close to home

Amid the pandemic, Chinese tourists opting to visit domestic locales

- By Zen Soo

HONG KONG — Millions of Chinese tourists usually would use their weeklong National Day holidays to travel abroad.

This year, travel restrictio­ns due to the coronaviru­s pandemic mean that some 600 million tourists — about 40% of the population — will travel within China during the holiday that began Thursday, according to Ctrip, China’s largest online travel agency.

That’s still down 25% from last year, when tourists took 782 million domestic trips and generated tourism revenue of $95.4 billion, according to government data.

The eight-day holiday this year, which coincides with the Mid-Autumn Festival, will be a litmus test of whether China’s tourism industry can bounce back following the battering it took earlier in the year. Travel within the country, and sometimes within cities, was restricted beginning with the Lunar New Year as China fought the spread of the coronaviru­s that emerged in the central city of Wuhan and has sickened more than 34 million people, killing over a million.

The weeklong holiday in October is typically the busiest time for domestic travel.

With theworld’s biggest-spending tourists spending their money traveling domestical­ly, local government­s are offering discounts and subsidies to tourists, including free or heavily discounted tickets to attraction­s.

Zhao Kerui, a designer with a flexible working schedule, often takes several trips abroad each year. Last year, he visited Malaysia and Japan. He had planned to visit Turkey or South Korea this year, but eventually decided to instead visit cities like Chengdu, known for being the home of pandas, as well as scenic Guilin, famed for its karst limestone hills.

“To take a trip abroad, you will be quarantine­d for half a month when you arrive, and when you return, it’s another half a month of quarantine,” Zhao said. “One month is gone with you doing nothing at all.”

That’s a sentiment shared by many Chinese who can afford to fly overseas for holidays but now are barred by flight cancellati­ons and quarantine restrictio­ns. Thailand, one of the most popular destinatio­ns among Chinese travelers, closed its airports to internatio­nal commercial flights in April and has yet to fully reopen to tourism.

So instead, Chinese will be crowding into popular attraction­s, such as the Disneyland resort in Shanghai and the research base for panda breeding Chengdu, Ctrip’s report said.

China is one of the few countries in the world where millions are freely touring around the country, while most countries are discouragi­ng unnecessar­y travel as they battle coronaviru­s outbreaks.

China has reported no new locally-transmitte­d coronaviru­s infections since Aug. 16, and the country’s culture and tourism ministry last month eased restrictio­ns on tourist sites, allowing them to operate at 75% capacity. Visitors also are encouraged to obey social distancing during their travels.

Hotel bookings are 50% higher compared to last year, and airline reservatio­ns are on par with 2019, helped by discounts for hotels and flights, according to data from Fliggy, Alibaba’s online travel arm.

Railway authoritie­s said they expect 108 million train journeys to be made between Sept. 28 and Oct. 8. Overall, train and airline passenger numbers are still forecast to be lower than in previous years amid concerns that restrictio­ns could be reimposed if new cases are detected.

 ?? CHINATOPIX ?? China’s National Days holiday in October is typically the busiest time for domestic travel. Above, tourists visit Zhejiang province.
CHINATOPIX China’s National Days holiday in October is typically the busiest time for domestic travel. Above, tourists visit Zhejiang province.

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