Phuket holidays planned
21/1/2005 8:25
Shanghai Daily news
Three local travel agencies have banded together to restart trips to
Thailand's tsunami-hit Phuket Island over the Spring Festival holiday. And
for Chinese nationals heading for Europe or Down Under, several new services are
being offered to make posting security bonds easier. Shanghai international
Travel Service, Shanghai China Youth Travel Service and Spring International
said they are now developing a low-price Phuket package that will begin on
February 11, two days after the start of the Lunar New Year. "Tours to Phuket
are usually 1,000 yuan (US$120) more expensive during the Spring Festival. But
this year, we will offer a price that will be no higher than at other times
during the year," said Wu Derong, general manager of the Shanghai China Youth
Travel. Four- and five-day trips to the resort island cost 4,000 yuan to
5,000 yuan in non-holiday periods. If the group tours do set out on schedule,
they would be the city's first since Phuket routes were closed following the
December 26 earthquake and tidal waves that ravaged the Indian
Ocean. Shanghai's airlines have not restarted direct flights, so air service
would be handled by Thai Airways. Jason lu, marketing administrative
executive of the Thavorn Hotels and Resorts Phuket, said 70 percent of the
damaged buildings on the island have been rebuilt. "Except for BangTao and
Patong beaches on the west shore of Phuket and Phi Phi Island off the south,
most parts of the Phuket were not stricken by the tsunamis," he said. The
other significant development for vacationers was announced yesterday at the
opening session of the World Travel Fair 2005 at the New International Expo
Center in Pudong. China construction Bank said it has begun providing credit
certification for travelers to Europe and Australia. In the past, Chinese
tourists were required to post a refundable sum ranging from 80,000 yuan to
100,000 yuan with their travel agents to guarantee their return to
China. Certification will also be available for a 700-yuan fee from Shanghai
Oriental Pawn Co Ltd, which will allow customers to post houses, vehicles,
jewelry or antiques as collateral.
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