URUMQI, Sept. 9 (Xinhua) -- The tourism industry in
China's far western Xinjiang has been hard hit again by a string of bizarre
needle stabbings in its capital Urumqi, a local official said Wednesday.
The Urumqi riot on July 5, which killed nearly 200
people, mostly ethnic Han people, had earlier dealt a heavy blow to the sector.
Chi Chongqing, Party chief of the Xinjiang tourism
bureau, said the brief recovery of tourism in Xinjiang in August was due to
government subsidies after the riot.
The average occupancy rate at star-rated hotels in
Xinjiang had climbed to 85 percent before mass gatherings of residents in
protest against needle attacks amid panic and anger.
The protests left four dead and 14 others in
hospital.
The occupancy rate, however, has plunged to around 25
percent after the renewed tensions in the city, Chi said. A total of 76 tourist
groups have canceled planned trips to Xinjiang, involving 3,358 would-be
travelers, in the month to Sept. 8, he noted.
To revive the tourism industry after the Urumqi riot,
the regional government allocated 5 million yuan (730,000 U.S. dollars) to
subsidize travel agencies who arranged tourist groups to Xinjiang from July 6 to
Aug. 31.
Chi added that the preferential policy may be
extended to the end of October to give further boost to the tourism sector in
the tourism peak season.
By Friday, local health and police authorities had
confirmed 531 victims of hypodermic syringe stabbings, 171 of whom showed
obvious signs of needle attacks. The majority of the victims are of the Han
ethnic group and the minority are from the ethnic groups including Uygur, Hui
and Kazak.
Special Report:
Urumqi Riot
