China’s crackdown on Tibet will hit tourism

Chinese travel companies specializing in tours to Tibet say they expect the security lockdown of the Himalayan region to keep foreign travellers out for up to three months. 


 

Chinese tourism authorities have ordered travel companies not to apply for permits for people wishing to travel to Tibet, and many foreigners have been diverted elsewhere or have had their payments refunded, travel agents told AFP.


“The Tibet Travel Bureau said that because of the incidents in Lhasa, they do not want to issue permits for travel into Tibet,” said the manager of one company in Chengdu, the capital of southwestern Sichuan province, which borders Tibet.


“Some people who had already booked tours with us and have been issued permits have not been able to go, and I think it will be impossible for independent travellers for some time,” she said, speaking on condition of anonymity.


Tibet has been sealed to outsiders since the weekend, following violent protests in the capital, Lhasa, by Tibetans against Chinese rule that have since spilled to other provinces in China.
Authorities in Lhasa have forced most foreigners, including tourists, aid workers and people working in the tourism sector, to leave.


The Tourism Administration of Tibet confirmed the issuing of permits had been suspended, and they would likely not begin until May at the earliest. “We don’t know when we’ll restart issuing the permits. It depends on the situation, perhaps after April,” a male official with the administration in Lhasa told AFP. “The reason is the riot in Lhasa . . . we made the decision for the safety of the tourists.”


The travel ban is likely to deal a financial blow to China’s tourism sector as Tibet has become a pivotal drawcard for travellers alongside the Great Wall, famed Terracotta Warriors and historic sites in Beijing such as the Palace Museum.


The official Xinhua News agency has reported massive increases in the number of tourists, both foreign and domestic, to Tibet since the opening of a controversial railway across the Tibetan Plateau in mid-2006.


More than four million tourists visited last year, up 64 per cent from the year earlier, according to official figures. Revenue from tourism contributed more than 14 per cent of the region’s gross domestic product in 2007, and at US$668 million was up a year-on-year 75.1 per cent, the figures show.


The head of the regional tourism administration, Wang Songping, predicted confidently early this year that visitors to Tibet would hit five million in 2008, with revenues soaring by 24 per cent.


A U.S. tour operator in Chengdu said most people in China’s travel industry worked on commission, rather than salary, so hotels, restaurants and other tourism-dependent businesses in Tibet were facing lean times during what should be their peak season. With about 25 per cent of his business centred on Tibet, he was “unlikely to be crippled” by the travel ban, the American said.


“It will be a tough year, but the industry will bounce back and because China is a big place, other areas could benefit in the short term,” he said. However, he added that some clients planning to travel to the fringes of Tibet “are concerned about their safety while they are there.”

 
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