BEIJING, May 27 (Xinhua) -- Chinese tour companies
are promoting short, domestic trips for the upcoming three-day holiday as the
A/H1N1 flu casts a shadow over travel.
The traditional Dragon Boat Festival begins Thursday,
when the Chinese eat sticky rice cakes wrapped in bamboo leaves and watch dragon
boat matches to mark the death Qu Yuan, one of China's most famous poets.
But the three-day holiday has prompted fewer people
this year to travel abroad as more than 12,000 cases of A/H1N1 flu have been
reported around the world.
China International Travel Service (CITS) cancelled
trips to Europe and Japan after the flu broke out overseas. Bookings for tours
to some countries where the flu was reported dropped by more than 50 percent
against the same period last year, it said.
"We have to promote more domestic trips to rural
destinations so people can enjoy the outdoors and keep far from the flu," said a
CITS spokesman.
"No one has inquired about tours to Hong Kong or the
Republic of Korea over the holiday, since flu cases were reported there," said
Zhao Li, a clerk at Shandong Jiahua Culture International Travel Service. "A
70-member tour group that had been scheduled to arrive in Hong Kong and Macao on
May 26 has decided to postpone the tour until June."
Wang Jiachen, general manager of Shandong Airlines
International Travel Agency in east China, said fears were also affecting
long-distance domestic travel.
"Some people from the southern city of Guangzhou had
plans to travel to Jinan (the provincial capital of Shandong), but now we have
to cancel the trips because of fears of the flu," he said.
"We are unable to see ahead. I'm worried the travel
industry would be hit as it was during the spread of SARS in 2003."
But some officials expressed optimism about the
industry.
Wang Chunsheng, an official in charge of domestic
travel of the Shandong Provincial Tourism Bureau, said: "These fears would not
last long, as the government has been controlling the spread of the virus
strictly. The probability of a full-blown pandemic is very low."
"It's a chance for tour companies to switch tourists
from international destinations to domestic sites near travelers' hometowns,"
Wang said.
Chen Shuqin, 44, in Nanjing, capital of east China's
Jiangsu Province, said she was still discussing with her family whether to enjoy
lobsters in Xuyu City in northern Jiangsu or watch dragon boat matches in
Changshu City in the south. Both cities are near Nanjing.
"Prices for tours are much lower than during the May
Day holidays about a month ago," she said. "We don't want to miss a chance for a
short trip. The flu is not that terrible, and besides, outdoor activities are
good for our health."