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Destinations known | Will Singapore be the winner when Chinese tourists can more easily travel again after January 8?

  • Unlike Japan, Canada, Italy and other countries, Singapore hasn’t imposed any Covid restrictions on Chinese travellers following China’s plans to open up
  • Chinese tourists may well remember who made them feel welcome and who didn’t long after any reimposed Covid restrictions have gone

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A Chinese tourist takes photos of the iconic Merlion statue in Singapore in 2015. Photo: AFP

The Chinese are coming. Sometime. Maybe.

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China might be reopening, its millions of would-be tourists and other global travellers having been freed of almost all Covid-19 shackles, but many of the countries that have been waiting desperately for the return of all those lovely tourist dollars are now keeping a wary foot behind the door, if not slamming it firmly shut.

China has announced it will scrap its quarantine requirement for arrivals from January 8, making travel abroad after almost three years of total isolation more viable for its citizenry.

But the welcome mats that have been so forlornly stored across the world have not been whipped out as quickly as the returning travellers might have hoped, ostensibly because the coronavirus is now running rampant through the world’s most populous country.

Chinese tourists in Venice. Italy started mandatory testing on mainland visitors on December 28. Photo: Getty Images
Chinese tourists in Venice. Italy started mandatory testing on mainland visitors on December 28. Photo: Getty Images

Given that most populations across the planet appear to be riddled with Covid and have largely given up testing at all, it might seem discriminatory to target just the Chinese (including arrivals from Hong Kong and Macau).

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