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Thailand celebrates Chinese tourists on first day of visa-waiver scheme with VIP welcome from PM

  • Thai PM Srettha Thavisin on Monday personally greeted the first batch of Chinese nationals to arrive after visas for visitors from China were waived
  • Dancers in traditional costume and puppeteers also put on performances for the bemused visitors, who came in on a flight from Shanghai

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Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin (centre) welcome Chinese tourists with gifts as they arrive at Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok on Monday, the first day of a visa-waiver scheme for Chinese nationals. Photo: AFP
Chinese tourists landing in Bangkok got a VIP welcome on Monday, as Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin personally greeted the first batch of visitors to arrive in Thailand after it waived visas for Chinese nationals to boost the key tourism industry.
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Dancers in traditional costume and puppeteers also put on performances for the bemused visitors, who came in on a flight from Shanghai. Many stopped to take selfies with Srettha.

Tourism is a crucial driver of Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, best known for its picturesque beaches and vibrant nightlife, and reviving the industry that was hard hit by the pandemic is one of the priorities of newly elected Srettha, who inherited an underperforming economy.

Chinese tourists are greeted by Thai dancers at the arrivals gate of Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok on Monday. Photo: AFP
Chinese tourists are greeted by Thai dancers at the arrivals gate of Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok on Monday. Photo: AFP
China’s own post-pandemic economic woes, however, have meant that fewer tourists from what was once Thailand’s biggest market are flying in, a situation Srettha hopes the visa waiver can help to fix.

“We are confident this policy will stimulate the economy,” the prime minister told reporters at Suvarnabhumi airport, adding that tourist safety will be prioritised.

The visa waiver scheme runs from September 25 until February next year.

The government expects 2.88 million Chinese visitors during that five-month period, slightly higher than the 2.34 million Chinese who visited so far this year.

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