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SINO DAILY
China chides its 'unruly' tourists
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 02, 2013


Chinese flock to Tiananmen and jam trains in holiday exodus
Beijing (AFP) Oct 01, 2013 - Flag-waving crowds packed Beijing's Tiananmen Square Tuesday to celebrate National Day which heralds China's "Golden Week" holiday, as the country's transport network strained with thousands of vacation travellers.

President Xi Jinping and state leaders sheltered under umbrellas in driving rain at a morning ceremony in the expansive square, while school children and a military band were wrapped in plastic ponchos under a leaden sky.

But as the weather cleared and the square reopened to the public, tourists crammed in, many holding flags and wearing Mao caps.

The scene was dominated by an incongruous giant 13-metre-high (43-feet) vase of fake flowers and fruit, an installation which has attracted criticism online as an unnecessary expense.

Transport networks were jammed full of holidaymakers as the 10-day travel period, which started Saturday, hit its peak.

Vacationers were expected to log a total of 430 million trips, the official China News Service said, with tourist sites and highways across China expected to see large crowds over the coming week.

Railway ticket halls and platforms were filled with travellers, weighed down with infants, luggage and cameras.

Around 400,000 passengers left Beijing from its four train stations on Monday, the Beijing News reported, citing city railway authorities.

A train station in the eastern city of Nanjing was expected to send off 610,000 passengers in the first four days of the holiday, with ticket halls and platforms at stations around the country filled with travellers.

Passengers at a station in northern Taiyuan city stood backpack-to-backpack as they shuffled toward their platforms, streaming around rows of metal seats and filling the aisles of the vast hall, images from China News Service showed.

Chinese tourists should not pick their noses in public, pee in pools or steal airplane life jackets, China's image-conscious authorities have warned in a handbook in their latest effort to counter unruly behaviour.

The National Tourism Administration publicised its 64-page Guidebook for Civilised Tourism -- with illustrations to accompany its list of dos and don'ts -- on its website ahead of a "Golden Week" public holiday that started on October 1.

As Chinese tourists increasingly travel abroad, they have developed a stereotype of "uncivilised behaviour", which Vice Premier Wang Yang said in May had "damaged the image of the Chinese people".

Several countries, including debt-laden European nations, have eased visa restrictions to attract increasingly affluent Chinese tourists, but reports have also emerged of complaints about etiquette.

A mainland Chinese woman who in February had her son relieve himself in a bottle in a crowded Hong Kong restaurant sparked an outpouring of anger online, with some locals deriding mainlanders as "locusts".

The government has previously issued pithy guidelines telling tourists how to behave, but the latest booklet elaborated in great detail.

It warned travellers not to pick their noses in public, to keep their nose-hair neatly trimmed and, if they had to pick their teeth, never to use their fingers.

It also urged them not to occupy public toilets for long periods of time or leave footprints on the toilet seat. Nor should they pee in swimming pools.

Travellers should not drink soup straight from the bowl or make slurping sounds when eating noodles, it warned.

And after taking a flight they must leave the life jackets underneath their seats, the rulebook said, explaining that "if a dangerous situation arises then someone else will not have a life jacket".

A tour guide surnamed Zhang who was in Hong Kong on Tuesday said his company had given him a copy of the rules at the start of the seven-day October holiday.

Before this he said they had distributed a much briefer set of guidelines -- which fit on a single sheet of paper.

"I feel things need to be improved," he said, standing in the city square packed with mainland tourists. "If we bring chaos to other places, it's our image -- the Chinese image -- that suffers."

The handbook also dispensed country-specific advice: Chinese visitors to Germany should only snap their fingers to beckon dogs, not humans.

Women in Spain should always wear earrings in public -- or else be considered effectively naked.

And diners in Japan were instructed not to play with their clothes or hair during a meal.

A 33-year-old tourist, also surnamed Zhang, visiting Hong Kong from central Anhui province complained that the guidelines were too many and too specific.

"You cannot possibly look through all of the rules before you go travelling. Also the rules are different in different places," he said. "I think it's not very feasible."

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