Want China Times, Staff Reporter 2014-07-19
Many Chinese travelers have canceled their flights with Malaysia Airlines or asked to switch to another airline after flight MH17 was shot down over eastern Ukraine on Thursday, the second tragedy to befall the airline in four months, after the disappearance of flight MH370 in March, reports Yicai, the website of Shanghai's China Business News.
A bouquet of flowers placed at an empty Malaysia Airlines counter at Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam, together with a picture of one of the people aboard the flight. (File photo/CNS) |
Many Chinese travelers have canceled their flights with Malaysia Airlines or asked to switch to another airline after flight MH17 was shot down over eastern Ukraine on Thursday, the second tragedy to befall the airline in four months, after the disappearance of flight MH370 in March, reports Yicai, the website of Shanghai's China Business News.
Chinese
nationals accounted for around two thirds of the 239 people on board flight
MH370, which went missing en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8 and
which has still not been located despite extensive searching. Though there is
no evidence to suggest that Malaysia Airlines was at fault for the loss of
either flight, the second disaster in a short space of time may prove fatal for
its reputation, at least where Chinese travelers are concerned.
Since the
disappearance of MH370, in which the response from both the airline and the
Malaysian government was widely criticized in China, the number of Chinese
tourists visiting Malaysia has declined by 40%. Chinese travel agencies had
planned to promote tours to Malaysia for the summer peak season but China
Environment International Travel Service says after the crash of MH17 on
Thursday that its customers who bought Malaysia Airlines tickets have all asked
to cancel their reservations or demanded that they travel to Malaysia by
another airline.
Malaysia's
loss could be Thailand's gain despite the political unrest in the country, as
Bangkok will waive visa fees for Chinese nationals from Aug. 1 to Oct. 31 this
year in a bid to bring tourists back.
Flight MH17
took off from Amsterdam bound for Kuala Lumpur on Thursday but crashed close to
Ukraine's border with Russia, killing all 298 people on board. Pro-Russian
separatists have denied they launched the missile that brought down the plane,
as reported by major Western news outlets. International monitors have reached
the crash site to investigate, according to CNN and BBC.
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