Just a handful of Chinese visitors were posing for photos and basking in the sun this week in the market and plazas near Chiang Mai’s ancient Tha Phae Gate, one of many tourist hotspots still waiting for millions of Chinese travelers to return.
The beaches and temples of destinations like Bali and Chiang
Mai are the busiest they have been since the pandemic struck three years ago,
but they’re still relatively quiet.
Still, Chanatip Pansomboon, a soft drinks seller in the
Chinatown district of Chiang Mai, a scenic riverside city in northern Thailand,
was upbeat. He trusts that with the number of flights from China steadily
increasing, it’s only a matter of time.
“If a lot of them can return, it will be great as they have
buying power,” Chanatip said.
The expected resumption of group tours from China is likely
to bring far more visitors. For now, it’s only individual travelers who can
afford to pay, with flights costing more than triple what they normally do, who
are venturing abroad.
This includes people like Chen Jiao Jiao, a doctor who was
posing for pictures with her children in front of Tha Phae Gate’s red brick
wall, escaping the damp chill of Shanghai to enjoy Chiang Mai’s warm sun and
cool breezes on her first overseas vacation since the virus surfaced in China
in early 2020.
“After three years of pandemic and a severe winter, now it’s
opening up,” Chen said. “For we Chinese, the first choice is to visit Chiang
Mai because the weather is warm and the people here are very warmhearted.”
In 2019, 1.2 million Chinese tourists visited Chiang Mai,
generating 15 billion baht ($450 million) of tourism-related income, money
sorely missed across the region as countries shut their borders to most travel.
Group tours are due to resume from Feb. 6, but the number of
tourists who will come will depends on how many flights are operating, said
Suladda Sarutilawan, director of the Tourism Authority of Thailand’s Chiang Mai
office. She said the hope is for about 500,000-600,000 visitors from China this
year.
Of course more Chinese would like to visit, said Li Wei, a
businessman from Shanghai, as he visited the ancient wall with his extended
family of seven.
“Since visas and flights are not back to normal yet, maybe
tourists will come in the next three months,” Li said.
Far to the south, on the tropical Indonesian resort island
of Bali, the shops and restaurants — some decorated with festive red lanterns
and red and gold envelopes used for Lunar New Year cash presents — were still
relatively empty.
Bali’s first post-pandemic direct flight from China arrived
on Sunday, bringing 210 tourists from the southern city of Shenzhen who were
greeted with garlands of marigolds and dance performances.
“Before COVID, we worked with travel agents who handled
Chinese tourists who brought us guests from China everyday, but since they
closed down there are far fewer guests,” said Made Sutarma, a seafood
restaurant owner in Bali’s Jimbaran area.
After three long years of almost no customers, Nyoman
Wisana, the general manager of a Chinese restaurant, said he was “very happy”
to see Chinese tourists return.
Fewer than 23,000 Chinese tourists visited Bali from
January-November of last year and only a quarter of the island’s 80 tour
operators who mostly handle Chinese clients are operating, said Putu Winastra,
chairman of the Bali Association of Indonesian Tours and Travel Agencies.
“Actually, we’re very concerned about this,” he said.
Indonesia is developing programs to attract more Chinese
tourists, including exploring starting direct flights from major cities like
Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou, he said.
Those who did visit this week seemed elated after enduring
many months of strict pandemic controls that put international travel beyond
the reach of almost all Chinese.
“I’m feeling fantastic since I haven’t gone abroad and
haven’t come to Southeast Asia to spend my holidays for the last three years,”
said Li Zhaolong, a tourist enjoying a day at the beach. “Bali is a very
beautiful place so I’m very happy coming here.”
Closer to home, casinos in the gambling enclave of Macao and
popular tourist spots in Hong Kong, a former British colony, drew bigger crowds
than usual but were still empty compared to the days before COVID-19. Normally,
places like Hong Kong’s scenic Ocean Park and Wong Tai Sin temple, with its
Nine-Dragon Wall, would be packed with visitors from the Chinese mainland.
Leo Guo, who works in the travel industry, brought his wife,
daughter, sister and parents for a week filled with visits to Hong Kong
Disneyland, Victoria Peak and the skyline-studded harbor, and of course,
shopping.
“For mainland Chinese, Hong Kong is a special city different
from other Chinese cities,” said Lee. “It’s a top destination for us.”
Further afield in Australia, Sydney-based travel agent Eric
Wang said the high cost of travel still appears to be keeping Chinese away even
as Chinese airlines increase flights.
Chinese accounted for nearly a third of all tourism spending
in Australia before the pandemic, with more than 1.4 million visiting in 2019.
Australia, like Japan, the U.S. and some other countries, is requiring visitors
coming from China to take COVID-19 tests before departure. But Wang, who works
for CBT Holidays, a company specializing in travel to and from China, said he didn’t
view that as a serious obstacle.
“It’s more about the airlines, because flights are not back
to normal frequency yet so air fares are like five times more expensive,” he
said.
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Kurtenbach reported from Bangkok. Sigit Purwono in Bali,
Indonesia, Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia, Alice Fung in Hong Kong and Edna
Tarigan in Jakarta, Indonesia, contributed to this report. -AP