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Ed Sander's avatar

As a tour operator for business study tours I can only fully agree with Xiao Qianhui's speech. (With the exception of fully blaming worsened China sentiment on the US, I mean ... come on!).

Our business has been non-existant for 3 years and we hear how our Chinese partner agencies are struggling to get foreign tourists in. There is a lot that needs to be done to solve this and Xiao Qianhui mentions many of them.

Besides worries about possible wars over Taiwan among my potential clients, I myself experience that many people are still reluctant because of covid origins and zero-covid policies and potential lockdowns. These might be highly unlikely to the well-informed, but not to the travellers. And there is a general distrust in the information provided by the government (failing to report cremation data ... looks like somebody has something to hide, how can we trust what they say?).

Also mentioned by Xiao Qianhui is the visa process. I have lived in China and been back to China on many different types of visa but every time the application process has been the worst I have experienced when travelling to any country. Listing all my previous employers? Listing the work my parents do? Sharing the addresses where my kids live? You gotta be kidding.

But you also know that if you don't follow the instructions you might end up in situations like in that Seinfeild episode with the Soup Nazi. That's what going to the visa application center feels like. One wrong step and 'No visa for you!'.

Maybe start by making foreigners feel welcome again (put back those multi-language metro signs in Beijing!) and making the process of going to China pleasant. Allow more flights (which are still much more expensive than they used to be). Provide easy ways of mobile payment that actually work without a Chinese bank account, provide free VPNs, etc.

When you get the feeling a host doesn't really want you to come over, you won't visit.

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Savannah's avatar

Really thank you for sharing these speeches and translations with us, they are inaccessible otherwise! Really encouraging to hear Chinese businesses speaking up about the impact of so few foreigners in the country. As a historian and from a cultural perspective the dangers are obvious, but I hope the business pressure can lead to lasting changes in the inbound tourism industry and, quite frankly, the way foreigners are treated. At this point, I don't recommend anyone visit China without speaking Chinese or having previous travel experience there. Even something as simple as booking a train ticket has become an exhausting ordeal that requires plenty of translation, Pleco, and a Chinese friend on speed-dial to ask for clarification.

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