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Tourists watch the motorboat show on the beach of Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province, May 1, 2008. Qingdao, a scenic coastal city, received 222,700 tourists on the first day of China's first shortened May Day holidays since 1999.(Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, May 3 (Xinhua) -- Chinese had their fervor
for holiday sightseeing cooled by a shortened vacation as tourist volume slumped
nearly a quarter in the past three-day May Day holiday.
A total of 8.94 million people visited 119 monitored
tourist spots around the country from May 1 to May 3, 24.45 percent down from
the same period last year, the national office in charge of holiday affairs said
on Saturday.
China cut the length of the May Day holiday from a
week to three days from this year as part of its scheme of restructuring
national holidays to avoid the overcrowding spring travel.
As a result, long-distance tours fell sharply despite
an increase in short and mid-distance traveling to large cities and neighboring
scenic spots, according to the office, which didn't give detailed numbers.
It said small tourist groups such as families and
friends rose by a big margin while self-driving became a dominant fashion.
Hundreds of millions of Chinese used to travel at the
same time during the May Day holiday and the other two "golden weeks" for the
Spring Festival and the National Day, cramming transport and tourist
destinations, and making holiday experiences far from enjoyable.
"A shortened May Day holiday has been effective to
solve the problem, but the implementation of paid holiday policies should be
guaranteed to meet Chinese' growing demand for tourism," said General Manager
Chen Xiaobin of the Beijing-based Caissa Travel.
The country witnessed a record high of 179 million
domestic tourists during last year's week-long May Day holiday, up 22.7 percent
year on year, with retail sales rising 15.5 percent to 320billion yuan (about
45.7 billion U.S. dollars).
China began to entitle its employees to paid holidays
of five to 15 days off a year in addition to national holidays and weekends in
December, when it scraped the May Day "golden week" and added Tomb-Sweeping Day,
Dragon-boat Festival and Mid Autumn Festival to the list of public holidays.
The "golden week" holidays were launched in 1999 to encourage Chinese to spend more money for the benefit of economic growth.
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