PUBLISHED : 9 Feb 2024 at 09: 42
Suvarnabhumi airport in Samut Prakan province welcomes an influx of tourists on Tuesday. (Photo: Somchai Poomlard)
SINGAPORE/BANGKOK – Chinese engineer and aviation enthusiast Wei Ming is exactly the kind of visitor the tourism authorities in Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand are looking for.
After Singapore scrapped visas for Chinese citizens, Wei, 44, said he ditched plans to go to Australia and booked a six-day holiday there instead. He said he also looked into visiting Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur, the two other visa-free Southeast Asian countries, but decided on the city-state because of the Singapore Airshow, which opens to the public on Feb 24.
As thousands of Chinese prepare to go abroad during the first Spring Festival holiday since Beijing lifted coronavirus pandemic travel restrictions last year, Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia are hoping their unprecedented visa waivers will lure a large proportion of these visitors – and their much-needed spending.
Chinese travellers often complain about the length of time and the hassle it takes for them to obtain travel visas, and their passport is 62nd
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