China tour agencies say Beijing bans South Korea trips

epa03222610 A general view of the skyline of the central business district with the China Central Television (CCTV) Tower (C) in Beijing, China, 17 May 2012. China officially declared the completion of the landmark China Central Television (CCTV) Tower on 16 May, a decade after work started on the 'twisted arch' building. The exterior of the 473,000-square-metre building was finished before the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. With the completion of the interior, state-run CCTV will relay live broadcasts of this summer's London Olympics via the new centre  EPA/HOW HWEE YOUNG

Bloomberg

Tour agencies in China’s Shandong province said they received notification from the government of a ban on group trips to South Korea, in a further signal that Beijing isn’t adopting a fast approach to restoring normal ties with Seoul.
A Shandong branch of China International Travel Service said it received notice that no tour groups to South Korea will be allowed beginning on January 1, while Shandong China Travel Service also said it can no longer organise trips. A Beijing travel agency said it hasn’t heard of any changes and is continuing with plans for group tours, though Yonhap News reported Beijing may take similar measures next week.
A spokeswoman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing denied there’s a ban, adding China was open to cooperation with South Korea in various sectors.
The developments follow conflicting reports over whether China is again blocking group visas to South Korea. The government earlier this year placed an unofficial curb on tourism following Seoul’s deployment of a US missile shield, but expectations have grown in recent months that an easing of tensions between the two nations would result in the dropping of barriers to allow a free flow of visitors to South Korea.
China is trying to “tame” South Korea with the ban amid high expectations for a restoration of relations after President Moon Jae-in’s China visit, Chosun Ilbo reported, citing an unidentified person in Beijing. Yonhap News said the ban may be temporary.
While Chinese President Xi Jinping and his South Korean counterpart Moon pledged in Beijing to move beyond the dispute, signs of discord were evident. Chinese media said the visit failed to produce a joint statement among leaders for the first time since the nations established formal diplomatic ties in 1992.

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