A bad shopping day
By Steve Chen in Hong Kong and Xin Dingding in Beijing (China Daily) Updated: 2006-10-18 11:16
A recent 'tourism nightmare' experienced by a group from Qinghai Province
visiting Hong Kong has shone a light on problems in the treatment of mainland
sightseers to the Special Administrative Region (SAR).
The group was on a three-day shopping and sightseeing tour
to Hong Kong last weekend when they were suddenly abandoned by their guide, as
he did not feel they were spending enough money.
In recent weeks, there
have been reports of mainland tourists being forced to stay in shops for
extended periods of time and pressured into buying things they do not want, or
being taken to unpleasant locations as "punishment" for refusing to purchase
goods.
The guide in this weekend's incident has been suspended for two
weeks and given a warning letter by the tour company.
However, some
industry peers say the punishment does not go far enough, especially given the
potential damage such practices can do to Hong Kong's image as a
tourist-friendly destination.
"The problem is that local tour companies
have these 'zero-fee' arrangements with mainland travel agents," says Michael
Shi, manager of the Inbound Chinese Visitors Department at China Travel Service.
"While the mainland agents collect fees from their customers, they pay
no money to local operators who handle the tours. This means these companies
have to make their money on commission earned when the tourists
shop."
Shi estimates that around 60 per cent of local tour operators work
on this basis, making zero-fee tours more of an industry-wide practice than an
anomaly in a city where competition for tour groups is intense.
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