China said that it will reopen its borders to foreign tourists for the first time in three years since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic by restoring the issuance of all types of visas from March 15.
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The gates to China finally openÂ
The removal of this last cross-border control measure imposed to guard against COVID-19 comes after authorities last month declared victory over a recent surge in the virus. The boost to the tourism sector should help rekindle a US$17 trillion economy that last year suffered one of its slowest growth rates in nearly half a century.
Areas in China that required no visas before the pandemic will revert to visa-free entry, the foreign ministry said on Tuesday. This will include the southern tourist island of Hainan and cruise ships passing through Shanghai port.
Visa-free entry to the southern manufacturing hub of Guangdong for foreigners from Hong Kong and Macau will also be resumed. The ministry also said foreigners holding visas issued before Mar 28, 2020, that are still within their validity dates will also be able to enter China.
All barriers put down
“Resuming applications for all types of visas removes another significant barrier in the resumption of normal travel between the UK and China,” Tom Simpson, managing director of the China-Britain Business Council, told
“The (council) has already seen business travel applications and arrivals begin to increase since January, however, this news should lead to a significant increase in visits in particular for tourism.”
China, which withdrew its advisory to citizens against foreign travel in January, also added another 40 countries to its list for which group tours are allowed, bringing the total number of countries to 60. Inbound and outbound international flights in the week of Mar 6 rose more than 350 percent compared with a year earlier to nearly 2,500 flights, according to the Chinese flight tracking APP Flight Master, though the number was still just 17.4 percent of 2019 levels.
In 2022, just 115.7 million cross-border trips were made in and out of China, with foreigners accounting for about 4.5 million. By contrast, China logged 670 million overall trips in 2019 before the arrival of COVID, with foreigners accounting for 97.7 million.
China’s smooth transition
Beijing abandoned its zero-COVID policies in December and in January canceled quarantine requirements for incoming travelers. On Monday, New Premier Li Qiang said that China took less than two months to achieve a “smooth transition” in its response to COVID-19 and that the country’s strategies and measures had been entirely correct.