Beijing to allow visa-free transit trips

Passengers push their luggage carts by the airliners’ check-in counters at the Beijing Capital International Airport. China will allow transit passengers from 45 countries to spend up to 72 hours in Beijing without a visa starting Jan. 1, 2013, city authorities said.

BEIJING— China will allow transit passengers from 45 countries including the US, Canada and most members of the EU to spend up to 72 hours in Beijing without a visa from next month, city authorities said.

The move would “strongly spur the development of the tourism industry, speed up building of an international city (and) expand contacts with the rest of the world,” the Beijing Tourism Administration said on its website.

The policy only applies to travelers in transit to a third country, and not for return flights to the capital, whose attractions include the vast Forbidden City.

Eligible nationalities include the United States, Canada, most European Union countries, Brazil, Argentina, Australia, South Korea, Japan and the United Arab Emirates.

One noted omission was Norway, which is embroiled in an ongoing spat with China over the naming of jailed political dissident Liu Xiaobo as the winner of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize.

It was not clear if Liu’s Nobel prize was the reason behind the omission of Norway from the new visa policy.

The tourist administration was not immediately available for comment on the matter.

According to their announcement, Beijing will “starting on January 1, 2013, implement a policy allowing foreigners from 45 countries with visas and plane tickets to a third country to transit through Beijing for 72 hours without a visa.”

But travelers would “face punishment” if they left the capital and lawbreakers would be banned for life, Gao Huada, deputy director of the city’s exit-entry bureau, was quoted in the China Daily as saying on Thursday.

China’s financial hub Shanghai already allows some foreigners in transit to visit the city for 48 hours, its government says on its website, including those from the US, some European countries, Japan, South Korea and Singapore.

Other travelers passing through the country are required to remain in the airport.

Beijing’s airport is the second-busiest in the world, having handled 47 million passengers in the first seven months of this year, according to the industry body Airports Council International.

Shanghai airport ranks 20th-busiest with 26 million travelers during the same period.

Read more...