A ferry disaster that killed dozens of Chinese tourists in Thailand
earlier this year has sent visitor numbers plunging from the kingdom's
single largest market.
The Chinese make up about a quarter of Thailand's 35 million annual
visitors who are drawn by cheap beach vacations, renowned food and
Bangkok nightlife.
But in July a ferry carrying mostly Chinese tourists back to the resort island of Phuket sank killing 47.
August recorded an immediate dip of 12 percent and September brought
15 percent fewer Chinese tourists than the same months last year.
October was the hardest hit, with the tourism ministry reporting
Wednesday a same-period decrease of about 20 percent -- or 160,000
people -- from 2017.
About $476 million was lost in spending over the three-month period, statistics showed.
Thailand has seen tourism slowdowns following a bombing in 2015 in central Bangkok and a military coup in 2014.
But the prolonged slump of the past few months has been a "wake-up call"
for Thailand's tourism operators, Paul Pruangkarn of the Pacific Asia
Travel Association said, as it has pushed the sector to mull its
overreliance on one country.
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"Too many people have always been focusing too much on getting
Chinese tourists," said Pruangkarn, whose association represents
hundreds of businesses around the region.
He predicted tourist numbers will ultimately bounce back.
Since the Phuket tragedy the government has rolled out inducements aimed at regaining trust and making travel easier.
The immigration bureau exempted Chinese tourists from paying a $60 visa-on-arrival fee from November to mid-January.
Last month four immigration officials were demoted from their
position following a probe that found they were demanding "tips" from
Chinese tourists to fast track their entry.
Source - TheJakartaPost