The government is stepping up its campaign to attract foreign visitors to Taiwan in the wake of the massive 921 earthquake, a tourism official announced yesterday.
Hsu Wen-sheng (
Hsu said that due to widespread reports by the international media on the earthquake that devastated parts of central Taiwan, foreign tourists are under the mistaken impression that the entire island is a quake-stricken area.
They are staying away, casting a pall over the usually booming tourism business which has seen hotel occupancy rates plunge by an average of 60 percent, he said.
The number of Taiwanese people scheduled to go abroad or travel around the island has also dropped by 50 percent and 70 percent, respectively, according to Hsu.
The tourism bureau has initially estimated that as of November, international hotels had lost NT$1.06 billion in room and restaurant revenue, while smaller hotels had lost about NT$600 million in canceled bookings, he said.
Private resorts had lost about NT$1.21 billion, travel agencies had lost about NT$2.54 million, while 210,000 international airline seats had been canceled as of December, he said.
Total losses incurred by the tourism industry have been estimated at NT$30 billion, bureau officials added.
Hsu said that in order to help revive tourism, the government has provided low-interest loans to tourism operators, and is stepping up an international campaign to attract more foreign visitors.
The government has also planned trips on the theme of lessons to be learned from the earthquake, and has worked out four routes with local travel agencies.
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Five flights have been arranged to help nearly 2,000 Taiwanese tourists return home from Okinawa after being stranded due to cruise ship maintenance issues, the Ministry of Transportation and Communications announced yesterday. China Airlines Ltd (中華航空), and EVA Airways Corp (長榮航空) have arranged five flights with a total of 748 additional seats to transport 1,857 passengers from the MSC Bellissima back to Taiwan, the ministry said. The flights have been scheduled for yesterday and today by the Civil Aviation Administration, with the cruise operator covering all associated costs. The MSC Bellissima, carrying 4,341 passengers, departed from Keelung on Wednesday last week for Okinawa,
US president-elect Donald Trump said he would “never say” if Washington is committed to defending Taiwan from China, but “I would prefer that they do not do it [ an attack],” adding that he has a “good relationship” with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平). “I never say because I have to negotiate things, right?” Trump said in an interview with NBC’s Meet the Press host Kristen Welker after saying he would not reveal his incoming administration’s stance on Taiwan’s defense in the event of an attack. Asked the question again, Trump, in a reference to China, said: “I would prefer that they