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A new wave of tourists from China may provide a
timely boost for Britain's pressured tourism industry, despite anxieties about
visiting London in the wake of recent suicide bomb attacks.
The first authorized group of package tourists from China took a whirlwind tour
around the capital last month - and it is hoped that thousands more will follow
in their footsteps.
''The Chinese read the news and there is anxiety about London safety ... but it
may well be they still come to the UK but spend less time in London,'' said
Carey Fletcher, director at China Holidays, a small independent travel agent in
London that caters for 2,000 mainland visitors a year.
Last Monday, a group of 80 mainland sightseers took in a catamaran tour of the
River Thames and a trip to the London Eye - a huge Ferris wheel punctuating the
city's skyline - before making a beeline for Buckingham Palace. The tourists
also headed for the Madame Tussauds museum.
The historic visit came after China gave the green light for its citizens to go
on organized tours stamping Britain with ``Approved Destination Status.''
``There's a tremendous amount of built-up interest because the Chinese generally
have not been able to travel to London or the UK as tourists,'' said Fletcher,
who recently opened a Beijing office.
A similar agreement covering most European countries came into effect in
September but Britain was not a signatory. Until now, only business people and
students had been authorized to make the trip.
According to industry estimates, as many as 10,000 ADS tourists per year could
now venture into Britain, Fletcher predicted.
Tourism bosses believe Britain can reap the benefits, despite fears of a
downturn in the sector following the fatal July 7 suicide bomb attacks that
killed 52 people plus four suicide bombers and injured 700, and a further
series of botched bombs.
Visit Britain, the tourism body, said it counted on double-digit growth in the
number of Chinese flocking to the country in 2005.
Some 95,000 visas were granted for Chinese to visit Britain last year, for
business or educational purposes, an increase of around 40 percent on the
previous year, Visit Britain spokesman Carl Walsh said.
Those visitors spent around 131 million(HK$1.78 billion) while in Britain. The
number of Chinese vacationing abroad has increased tenfold in the past decade,
from four million in 1995 to a predicted 40 million in 2005, a recent Visit
Britain report said. To that end, British Airways opened up a passenger route
from London to Shanghai at the start of June.
``Naturally, the Approved Destination Status helps us,'' commented BA
spokeswoman Amanda Allan.
Meanwhile, of the 80 visiting tourists last week, around half of them were
Chinese journalists.
``When they go back to China there is going to be a lot of publicity about
coming to the UK,'' noted Fletcher.
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
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