Xisha may open to tourists soon
Updated: 2012-05-10 09:15
By Xin Dingding in Beijing and Huang Yiming in Haikou (China Daily)
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A store on Yongxing Island in the South China Sea on Sunday. |
The Xisha Islands in the South China Sea may open to tourists this year, officials said.
Located 330 kilometers southeast of South China's Hainan province, the Xisha Islands are one of four big island groups in the South China Sea, together with the Dongsha, Nansha and Zhongsha islands.
Tourists will be able to visit the islands mainly on cruise ships while some can travel by air, Feng Wenhai, an official in charge of the Zhongsha, Nansha and Xisha islands' affairs under Hainan provincial government, was quoted by Xinhua News Agency as saying.
"They will eat or sleep on the cruise ships, instead of on the islands. Tourists can leave only footprints on the Xisha Islands," he said.
Planning is under way to estimate the islands' capacity for handling tourists and draft regulations for protection of the islands' environment, he said.
Calls to Feng's office on Wednesday afternoon went unanswered.
The arrangement is due to the islands' limited capacity.
Cai Damao, who works on Yongxing Island, one of the Xisha Islands, told China Daily that the Xisha Islands have to rely on supply boats to transport drinking water from Hainan Island to the Xisha Islands, and use electricity produced by diesel generators.
But islanders like him welcomed tourists, because "facilities on the islands could be further improved and benefit us, too," said Cai, adding that a wharf for cruise ships to dock on Yongxing Island is under construction.
Changes have been great in the past decade, said Cai, who moved from Hainan Island to Yongxing Island 10 years ago with some co-workers.
Cai takes care of vegetable and poultry for the army on the island. "The island now has a supermarket, two guesthouses, a few restaurants and even an Internet cafe," he said.
"Vegetables are grown in agricultural sheds that have automatic water spray Things are much easier than before," he said.
Though the Xisha Islands are regarded as the frontier and not suitable for developing tourism, some individual tourists still made their way to the islands to fish or visit family.
Earlier news reports said a four-day and three-night tour to the Xisha Islands by a supply boat costs 5,500 yuan ($870) per person.
Insiders said that Hainan province has been pushing to exploit the Xisha Islands' tourism resources since the 1990s, but has made no progress in the field.
With the complications of the situation in the South China Sea, the proposal looks more hopeful than before.
Tan Li, deputy governor of Hainan province, told a provincial tourism industry's meeting on April 24 that tours to the Xisha Islands must be opened this year.
Some netizens expressed interest in visiting the islands on Wednesday, saying the islands could rival Phuket Island in Thailand or other tropical islands.
Cai Ying, the daughter of Cai Damao, who works in Haikou, capital of Hainan, and has visited Yongxing Island, believes that the Xisha Islands will make a great tourist attraction.
"It's very quiet on Yongxing Island. The dazzlingly blue sea and sky really took my breath away," she said.
"Though it is hot all year-round, the breeze in the evening cools the air, and it is really a joy to circle around the island in a two hours' walk," she said.
The Xisha Islands boast more than 40 different kinds of birds, experts said. "Some of them you cannot find in other places," said Ouyang Jie, who visited the islands a few years ago.
Contact the writers at xindingding@chinadaily.com.cn and huangyiming@chinadaily.com.cn
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