Thailand’s love-hate relationship with Chinese tourists

A young girl peeing in the grounds of Bangkok’s Grand Palace , China tourists jumping queues and dirtying toilets - Thailand's social media is abuzz with criticism of Chinese visitors, but the country can't do without them either.

A tourist posing for a picture as she visits the White Temple in Chiang Rai, northern Thailand. Accused of urinating in public, spitting on the street, or kicking a sacred temple bell, free-spending Chinese tourists are receiving a mixed welcome as their soaring numbers help the kingdom's creaking economy.  Christophe Archambault/AFP Photo
Powered by automated translation

Chiang Rai, Thailand // Accused of urinating in public, spitting on the street, or kicking a sacred temple bell – free-spending Chinese tourists are receiving a mixed welcome as their soaring numbers help the kingdom’s creaking economy.

Growing outrage over the perceived disrespect of visitors from the Asian country saw authorities print thousands of Chinese-language etiquette manuals earlier this year in a bid to keep their tourists in check.

Last month it was a photo of a young girl peeing in the grounds of Bangkok’s Grand Palace that triggered the latest round of enraged, and sometimes racist, comments as Thai social media users claimed she was Chinese.

In March, a Thai model’s video of tourists from China jumping the queue at an airport was viewed more than two million times and saw a similarly angry rant against Thailand’s largest group of foreign holidaymakers.

At the gleaming Wat Rong Khun, also known as the White Temple, in northern Chiang Rai province, owner Chalermchai Kositpipat complained about the state of the toilets after a recent visit by a Chinese group.

“We had problems with some Chinese who defecated anywhere, so I asked the guides to explain to them that rules must be respected in Thailand,” Mr Chalermchai said, having earlier threatened to refuse entry to Chinese nationals.

But he stopped short of issuing a ban, and like Thai authorities is loath to cut out the Chinese at a time when they are bucking the trend of dipping visitor figures in the kingdom, where tourism accounts for 8.5 per cent of GDP.

Last year around 4.6 million Chinese nationals visited Thailand, with the average tourist spending 5,500 baht (Dh600) per day – more than the average European visitor.

Their collective contribution, expected to reach US$5.6 billion (Dh20.57bn) this year, is not one the ruling junta can afford to lose as it struggles to revive the economy – one of its key promises after seizing power from an elected government in May 2014 that was paralysed by months of protests in Bangkok.

At the White Temple, Thai tour guide Pin Su says her job has become an art in diplomacy due to the growing number of Chinese visitors.

“They do not always pay attention, they spit, talk loudly, sometimes they leave the toilet in a catastrophic state,” she said in between ferrying tourists around the building.

“But I cannot remind them every day that we must be careful to be clean. I do not want to offend them. And all these tourists, it is for Thailand!”

Bangkok’s ruling generals have been busy courting Beijing as they build new diplomatic allies after last year’s coup was widely condemned by western nations.

Last year, the two Asian nations forged new agricultural ties, and Beijing was also granted a major railway contract to construct two new lines criss-crossing Thailand.

With the recent easing of visa rules between the kingdom and China, where the growing ranks of the middle-classes are increasingly holidaying abroad, even more Chinese tourists are expected to arrive in Thailand this year.

Unsurprisingly, Thai authorities appear keen to downplay any incidents of strife.

“Chinese tourists do not create problems for us. They are nice tourists,” said Srisuda Wanapinyosak, an executive director at the Tourism Authority of Thailand.

“But sometimes there might be cultural misunderstandings,” she admitted.

Back at the White Temple, Cai Zheng Hua and his wife from the south-eastern province of Fujian in China, are enjoying their honeymoon.

He says that while some of his compatriots may “not have enough education to know how to behave”, they are very much in a “small minority”.

For most visitors Thailand is a “dream” and “very fashionable”, said Mr Cai, raving about the architecture at the site.

* Agence France-Presse