The Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said Monday it will not lift a ban on local travel agencies soliciting package group tours to China until the “personal freedom and travel safety” of Taiwanese travelers can be ensured, amid criticism following a recent fatal bus accident in China.
The council made the statement after a Taiwanese tour group was involved in a bus accident in China’s Gansu Province last Friday, leaving one Taiwanese national dead and 12 others injured.
The accident prompted criticism that Taiwan’s ban on China-bound tour groups -- in place since early 2020 -- has become a mere formality, with some travel agencies in Taiwan allegedly using “modified” tour arrangements to circumvent the rules, potentially weakening protections for Taiwanese travelers.
Photo: Chung Li-hua, Taipei Times
The council defended its policy, saying the Gansu accident was “simply a travel accident.”
The agency said that although the group of more than 30 Taiwanese travelers was “self organized” by relatives and friends, the Taiwanese travel agency tasked to handle the trip had purchased the required liability insurance and assigned a tour guide to accompany the group, all of which complies with current regulations.
“The fact that it was not a tour group organized by a travel agency did not affect travelers’ rights or weaken their protections,” it said.
Given travel to China remains under an “orange” alert, travel agencies in Taiwan will only be allowed to resume organizing China-bound tour groups “on the premise that the personal freedom and travel safety of Taiwanese nationals traveling to China can be ensured,” it said.
Taiwan raised the travel alert for China, Hong Kong and Macao to the second-highest “orange” alert level on June 27, 2024, advising citizens to avoid unnecessary travel to these regions due to increasing safety concerns.
MAC said the “main reason” the ban on travel agencies arranging pre-packaged tour groups to China cannot be lifted is that Beijing has continued to expand its national security laws in recent years.
It cited China’s June 2024 “guidelines” targeting what Beijing calls “Taiwan independence” separatists, as well as its encouragement of public reporting, saying these measures “seriously threaten the personal safety of Taiwanese nationals traveling to China, Hong Kong and Macao.”
According to MAC, from Jan. 1, 2024 to March 31, 2026, Taiwanese authorities received reports involving 330 Taiwanese nationals who went missing or were detained in China, Hong Kong or Macao.
Taiwan has banned China-bound group tours since early 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, but individual travel by Taiwanese nationals to China is not subject to the same ban.
The Tourism Administration confirmed yesterday that the Gansu tour did not constitute a violation of the ban, as the ban only prohibits travel agencies from recruiting “unspecified members of the public” for group tours to China.
Self-organized groups, in which members of the public find their own participants before asking a travel agency to make the arrangements, do not violate the ban, it said.
SECURITY: Starlink owner Elon Musk has taken pro-Beijing positions, and allowing pro-China companies to control Taiwan’s critical infrastructure is risky, a legislator said Starlink was reluctant to offer services in Taiwan because of the nation’s extremely high penetration rates in 4G and 5G services, the Ministry of Digital Affairs said yesterday. The ministry made the comments at a meeting of the legislature’s Transportation Committee, which reviewed amendments to Article 36 of the Telecommunications Management Act (電信管理法). Article 36 bans foreigners from holding more than 49 percent of shares in public telecommunications networks, while shares foreigners directly and indirectly hold are also capped at 60 percent of the total, unless specified otherwise by law. The amendments, sponsored by Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Ko
The eastern extension of the Taipei MRT Red Line could begin operations as early as late June, the Taipei Department of Rapid Transit Systems said yesterday. Taipei Rapid Transit Corp said it is considering offering one month of free rides on the new section to mark its opening. Construction progress on the 1.4km extension, which is to run from the current terminal Xiangshan Station to a new eastern terminal, Guangci/Fengtian Temple Station, was 90.6 percent complete by the end of last month, the department said in a report to the Taipei City Council's Transportation Committee. While construction began in October 2016 with an
NON-RED SUPPLY: Boosting the nation’s drone industry is becoming increasingly urgent as China’s UAV dominance could become an issue in a crisis, an analyst said Taiwan’s drone exports to Europe grew 41.7-fold from 2024 to last year, with demand from Ukraine’s fight against Russian aggression the most likely driver of growth, a study showed. The Institute for Democracy, Society and Emerging Technology (DSET) in a statement on Wednesday said it found that many of Taiwan’s uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV) sales were from Poland and the Czech Republic. These countries likely transferred the drones to Ukraine to aid it in its fight against the Russian invasion that started in 2022, it said. Despite the gains, Taiwan is not the dominant drone exporter to these markets, ranking second and fourth
The New Taipei City Art Museum this weekend plans to celebrate its first anniversary with a two-day extravaganza featuring live concerts and a large-scale synchronized fireworks and drone display, the New Taipei City Cultural Affairs Department said. The two-day celebrations are to take place in the museum’s outdoor park, with markets and live performances by singers including Ann Bai (白安), Bii (畢書盡) and the Cosmos People (宇宙人), the department said. The highlight on both evenings would be the "Echoes of Light" show, an aerial spectacle combining fireworks and drone performances designed around the concept of "dual stages in the sky," it