# tourism
Latest news and articles about tourism
Total: 8 articles found

Intercity Bus Plunges Into Ditch in Antalya, Killing Eight and Wounding Dozens
A Tekirdağ–Antalya passenger bus overturned into a ditch on 1 February, killing eight people and injuring 26. Rescue teams and the gendarmerie attended the scene, and an investigation into causes—ranging from road conditions and weather to vehicle maintenance and driver error—is expected.

Coach Overturns Near Antalya, Killing Eight and Spotlighting Turkey’s Road‑Safety Risks
A coach travelling from Tekirdağ to Antalya overturned on February 1, killing eight people and injuring 26. Rescue teams and the gendarmerie responded at the scene; authorities have launched an investigation into the cause. The crash underscores persistent road‑safety challenges on Turkey’s long‑distance routes and carries potential regulatory and reputational consequences for transport operators and tourism hubs like Antalya.

China Signals Boost for Services: State Council Expands Financial Support and Loan-Interest Subsidies to Drive Consumption
Beijing has launched a comprehensive plan to cultivate new service-sector consumption drivers and to optimise loan-interest subsidies for service businesses. The package pairs sectoral pilots — from rail-tourism to home-care and ultra-high-definition video — with stronger fiscal and financial support, aiming to boost domestic demand and create jobs while exposing implementation and credit-risk challenges.

Nearly Half of China–Japan Flights Axed as February Schedules Shrink
Flight-tracking data show a sharp rise in cancellations on China–Japan routes: 49 routes have no scheduled February flights and January cancellations hit 47.2 percent, up nearly eight points from December. Airlines have extended free refunds through March 28 as they contend with volatile demand and operational uncertainty, a development that could dent Japan’s inbound tourism recovery.

China’s Expanding Holidays Expose a Deeper Problem: More Days Off Don’t Fix Weak Incomes
China’s decision to extend the 2026 Spring Festival to nine days signals a possible trend toward longer statutory holidays. Yet analysts warn that more days off will not translate into sustained consumption or well‑being unless workers have higher, more secure incomes and enforceable rest rights; otherwise many new leaves will remain “paper” benefits and tourism gains will be diluted.

Hainan’s Duty‑Free Boom: Early Gains, New Shoppers and the Test of Durability
Hainan’s full‑island customs regime and a November 2025 duty‑free policy revision have catalysed a surge in sales and reshaped the island’s retail model by turning local residents into repeat duty‑free shoppers. Early figures are robust, but executives and analysts caution that the holiday‑period boost, heavy promotions and enforcement challenges mean the sector must improve assortment, service and inbound tourism to sustain growth.

Hainan’s One-Month Boom: How China’s Sealed-Border Free-Trade Port Has Unleashed a Shopping and Investment Rush
One month after China sealed Hainan as a full free-trade port, duty-free retail, tourism and new business registrations have surged. Cheaper imports, expanded visa-free access and relaxed tariff rules have turned the island into a magnet for shoppers and firms, but the rapid boom poses sustainability and distributional questions.

Hainan’s Duty‑Free Boom: Tourists Flood In, iPhones and Gold Fly Off Shelves in First Month of 'Sealed‑Port' Experiment
In the first month after Hainan implemented an island‑wide sealed‑port customs regime, duty‑free retail and tourism surged: RMB 4.86 billion in sales, sharp rises in hotel and flight bookings, and shortages in popular items such as gold jewellery and iPhones. Policy changes — expanded zero‑tariff lists, visa easing for Russian tourists, and consumer vouchers — have driven a rapid reorientation of demand, while customs digitalisation eased throughput and regulators warned of resale and fraud risks.