Taipei, February 8: Taiwan's Tourism Administration announced on Wednesday its decision to uphold a three-year ban on Taiwanese tour groups travelling to China, citing Beijing's failure to reciprocate by sending Chinese group tourists as reported by Central News Agency Taiwan. "The original plan will no longer proceed considering changes in the current situation and factors such as travel safety for Taiwanese nationals," stated the administration in a release.
This decision marks a departure from the November 2023 resolution, which allowed local travel agencies to begin arranging trip schedules for tour groups to China starting March 1, 2024, as reported by Central News Agency. Originally, Transportation Minister Wang Kwo-tsai had announced during a November plenary session of the Legislature that the Cabinet would lift cross-strait travel restrictions by the Lunar New Year, to take effect in March. Taiwan Detects Five Chinese Military Vessels, Two Aircraft Around Nation.
According to Central News Agency, the government's decision to permit Taiwanese tour groups to visit China would also entail the reopening of Taiwan's borders to tour groups from China, added Wang. Wang's statements represented a shift in the government's stance expressed in May 2023 and a statement by the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC), Taiwan's top government agency overseeing cross-Taiwan Strait affairs, in late August.
On May 19, when Ma Xiaoguang, spokesman for China's Taiwan Affairs Office, announced that Chinese travel agencies could resume business involving receiving Taiwanese group tourists immediately, Taipei did not respond positively. Instead, then Tourism Bureau chief Chang Shi-chung stated that regulations on group travel should be negotiated through existing channels--the Taiwan Strait Tourism Association and its Chinese counterpart, the Association for Tourism Exchange Across the Taiwan Straits--although Taiwan welcomed China's announcement.