Xinjiang: Slackening Tourism After September 11 Attacks

Tourist Information
Tourism office
Itineraries
Weather
Tourism Statistics
China Health
Currency
Visa
Traditional Holidays
China Top Ten
10 Major Hotels
10 Tourist Destination
10 Archaeological Sites
10 Major Cities
10 Famous Peoples
10 Historical Event
10 Major Firms
10 Famous Cuisines
10 Scenic Landscape
10 Main Productions
China city
Beijing
Shanghai
Guangzhou
Chongqing
Nanjing
Xian
Tianjin
Guilin
Qingdao
More.......


 ◆ Xinjiang: Slackening Tourism After September 11 Attacks


November was once the peak time to tour the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, an emerging tourist destination in northwest China famous for its exotic scenery and mouth-watering fruits. But not this year. Affected by the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States, the autonomous region's tourism has slackened off ahead of time, says Nayim Yazen, head of the regional tourism administration. Since the start of the U.S.-led military strikes in Afghanistan, most ports in the border region are on alert. The Khunjerab Port at the Sino-Pakistani border is closed. Confirmed travel plans for 631 tour groups which were to visit Xinjiang between September 11 and November 7 have been cancelled, with a loss of tens of thousands of tourists from Pakistan, Japan, the United States, Italy, Singapore and Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan. Not only are few overseas tourists visiting Xinjiang now, but also domestic travelers are postponing or canceling their tours, he says. "However the first three quarters of this year saw a 10-percent rise in the number of tourists", says Yazen. During the January-September period, the number of domestic tourists alone rose 46 percent, and about 216,000 travelers flooded into Xinjiang. As a move to promote tourism, the regional tourism administration will send a 150-member delegation to the International Tourism Fair in Kunming next month, said Yazen. In another development, the administration will give press conferences in Guangdong and Shanghai in the second half of November, to tell potential tourists what the autonomous region can offer during the cold winter days, he says.

China Trips copyright © 2001 - 2005 Web Tours International - contact info