Advertisement
Hong Kong tourism
Hong KongSociety

Hong Kong to step up crackdown on tourist scams during Labour Day ‘golden week’

Tourism minister says authorities will boost enforcement to protect visitors’ rights, calls on public to ‘cherish our travel reputation’

3-MIN READ3-MIN
9
Listen
Tourists on the waterfront in Tsim Sha Tsui. The government estimates that 980,000 mainland Chinese travellers will visit the city during the coming holiday. Photo: Karma Lo
Leopold Chen

Hong Kong will step up law enforcement against coerced shopping, unlicensed tour guides and unfair sales practices targeting visitors during mainland China’s Labour Day “golden week”, the city’s tourism minister has said.

Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism Rosanna Law Shuk-pui said on Saturday that hotel occupancy rates in Hong Kong were expected to exceed 90 per cent during the period, with the government estimating that 980,000 mainland travellers would visit, up by 7 per cent from the same holiday last year.

Law said authorities would step up enforcement to protect visitors’ rights during the period and called on the public to “cherish our travel reputation”.

Advertisement

“The travel industry is a vital part of Hong Kong’s economy,” she said on a radio programme. “It is a reliable source of income and provides many employment opportunities. We cannot allow anyone to exploit the strong recovery to commit illicit acts.”

Law said the Travel Industry Authority would step up patrols to guard against illicit business practices, forced shopping and unlicensed tour guides during the holiday, which runs from May 1 to 5 this year.

Advertisement

She added that the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department would conduct patrols at countryside tourism hotspots for crowd management and to mitigate the environmental impact.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x