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Related: HK Disneyland urged to learn lessons from
ticketing chaos incident
HONG KONG, Feb. 4 (Xinhuanet) -- Hong Kong
Disneyland underestimated the market needs over the Chinese Lunar New Year,
admitted the park's top executive Saturday, apologizing the third time for
denying entry of visitors after sold-out in the
holidays.
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| Hundreds of tourists wait outside the iron
gate in front of Hong Kong Disneyland February 2, 2006. Hundreds of
tourists holding tickets gathered outside the theme park demanding for
entry on Thursday after they were turned away as the theme park was
full. | "This Chinese New Year...we have had record 'sell out' crowds," Bill Ernest, the park's executive vice president and managing director, told a press conference held here on Saturday.
"Because of the high demand, we were not able to
accommodate everyone who came to the park," said Ernest, who had apologized for
the same situation through written statement twice over the previous two days.
On Wednesday and Thursday, hundreds of visitors with
tickets were shut out of the park, which closed its gate soon after opening for
reaching its maximum reception capability of around 30,000 people.

Most of the stranded visitors came far away such as cities
in China's mainland to fulfill their Disney dreams. They planned the trip
several weeks or months ago, booked half-year-valid tickets, which allow them to
visit the park on any day in half a year since the purchase.
Being refused entry when the park was full, the
tourists grew furious, waving their tickets, arguing with the park staff, and a
few scaled up the grills for entrance.
The above images repeatedly broadcast by local cable
TV were not "what Disneyland's reputation is built on," said Ernest, while
extending apology to "those who have been inconvenienced."
Promising reimbursement to people who couldn't get
into the park, he reiterated that they are the theme park's first Chinese New
Year holidays which end on Saturday in the mainland.

"Every market has unique dynamics that must be taken into
consideration and must be learned over time," said he, stressing that the influx
of tourists over the Chinese New Year holidays was "unprecedented."
Four months ago, the 3 billion U.S. dollar theme park
received a lower number of visitors than expected in the "golden week," the
first week of October when Chinese on the mainland celebrating the National Day.
Visitors to the park during the Chinese New Year
holidays, however, doubled that of those in the "golden week" and were much more
than the expectation of the management, said Ernest.
"We've never seen anything like this before," said
he, declining to give any specific number.
Aiming to earn 19 billion U.S. dollars over 40 years,
Hong Kong Disneyland planned to draw 5.6 million visitors in the first year
starting from last September. One third of the 5.6 million people are expected
to come from China's mainland.
Some 12.5 million people from the mainland visited
Hong Kong in last year, totaling almost half of all visitors to the city in the
whole year, according to data by the city's immigration authorities. Enditem
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