App

Hubei province tourism springing back to life
Updated: May 4, 2020 09:23 China Daily

Twenty-two major tourist attractions that reopened in Hubei province, the hardest hit region by the COVID-19 contagion in China, had received 520,400 visitors from May 1 to May 3, as people enjoy their first public holiday since the regional lockdown was lifted.

Although numbers were down significantly year-on-year, the tourism market is gradually recovering in the province as pandemic control measures are still in place.

According to the provincial culture and tourism bureau, the number of visitors received was down 83 percent year-on-year between May 1 and May 3, while tourism revenue plunged 94.5 percent to 30 million yuan ($4.2 million).

To avoid overcrowding and protect against risks of potential infection, the bureau earlier said that tourists should make bookings before visiting local scenic sites, and tourist flow should be limited to no more than 30 percent of the maximum capacity.

In the province's capital Wuhan, around 178,000 visits were made at the city's 21 A-level tourist attractions on May 2, down 58 percent from a year earlier, the bureau said.

Tourism revenue plunged 71 percent to 5.44 million yuan, it said.
Wuhan's landmark Yellow Crane Tower received around 1,000 visitors on May 2, only 18.5 percent of its daily maximum capacity, said the bureau.

The province lowered its novel coronavirus emergency response level from the highest to the second-highest level on May 2, with adjustments to prevention and control measures also instituted.

No new confirmed COVID-19 cases were reported in Hubei on May 2. The province has had no new confirmed COVID-19 cases for 29 consecutive days since April 4, according to the provincial health commission.

To revitalize the province's tourism sector, the provincial government established special funds of 100 million yuan to help tourism-sector enterprises influenced by the pandemic, said a notice issued on May 1.

Enterprises and government institutions are encouraged to give their employees a half-day extra vacation each May 1 this summer to boost the tourism sector, the notice said.

Medical workers around the country who came to aid the province's fight against the contagion can bring three family members to the province and enjoy free admission to any tourist attraction for the rest of their life, it added.

Han Street, a major shopping district in Wuhan, now has most of its shops open, but the number of visitors is still significantly lower than before the pandemic.

The district requires visitors to wear surgical masks, have their temperature checked, and show a green health code before entry.

Jiao Huirong and two of her friends visited Han Street on May 2 to get some fresh air after staying at home for more than three months.

"It's the first time we got together since the outbreak started, and we really missed each other," Jiao said.

Copyright© www.gov.cn | About us | Contact us

Website Identification Code bm01000001 Registration Number: 05070218

All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to www.gov.cn.

Without written authorization from www.gov.cn, such content shall not be republished or used in any form.

Mobile

Desktop

Copyright© www.gov.cn | Contact us

Website Identification Code bm01000001

Registration Number: 05070218