In Southern China, A Thriving African Neighborhood

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In the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, thousands of African immigrants, many of them small-scale clothing traders from Nigeria, have come seeking business opportunities. One of the Nigerian traders, who goes by his designer name of Niceguy, is shown here in the city's Little Africa neighborhood.
Nina Porzucki for NPR

In the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, thousands of African immigrants, many of them small-scale clothing traders from Nigeria, have come seeking business opportunities. One of the Nigerian traders, who goes by his “designer name” of Niceguy, is shown here in the city’s Little Africa neighborhood.

China and Africa have become major trading partners in recent years. Chinese companies have made a big push into Africa seeking raw materials like oil. And enterprising Africans now travel to China to buy cheap goods at the source and ship them home. Today, the city of Guangzhou, near Hong Kong, is home to some 10,000 Africans, the largest such community in China. The city’s Little Africa neighborhood is a world unto itself, with restaurants specializing in African food to money changers who deal in the Nigerian currency. But doing business in the city’s informal economy is full of risks.

The Tangqi wholesale mall in Guangzhou, China, is a labyrinth of tiny clothing shops. They look more like storage units, each one crammed full of T-shirts and jeans.

From morning well into the night, traders pack hundreds of T-shirts and jeans into boxes. Then comes the packing tape — a rip that echoes through the halls. This is the rhythm of Tangqi: pack and tape, pack and tape.

A Nigerian trader named Fortunato packs clothing in front of his shop. Fortunato is what he calls his “designer name.” He prefers this nickname since his legal status in China is, well, questionable. Fortunato’s shop is in a narrow hallway nicknamed “Lagos Line.” The majority of clothing bought and sold down the line is headed to Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial capital.

“Before, we used to buy [clothing] from Thailand, from Pakistan, India. All of a sudden fashion changed, and it became a China trend,” he says.

He came to China to cash in on this trend. But rather than simply buying cheap clothes to send home, Fortunato has taken it one step further. He formed a partnership with a fellow Nigerian trader called Niceguy — that’s his designer name — and they started a brand of clothing they call Niceguy Fortunato.

The name doesn’t quite roll off the tongue, but their clothing has flown off the racks. Their first design was a khaki button-down shirt. Over the breast pocket is a patch that says “survival.” According to Niceguy, whose nickname seems at odds with his somewhat intimidating presence, the shirt was an instant hit in the markets in Nigeria.

A Rough Start

Success, however, was not instant. Niceguy graduated several years ago from a Nigerian university with an engineering degree, but he couldn’t find a job. He heard from ex-classmates that he could easily get a visa to China. That sounded better than being unemployed in Nigeria, so he managed to put together a few thousand dollars and paid an agent to secure a visa.

The Little Africa neighborhood in Guangzhou is dominated by African immigrants who run the shops and stalls, but many customers are Chinese.

Nina Porzucki for NPR

The Little Africa neighborhood in Guangzhou is dominated by African immigrants who run the shops and stalls, but many customers are Chinese.

He arrived at the Guangzhou airport three years ago with the phone number of a cousin, just a few hundred dollars left in savings, and no real idea of what he would do. The first year was rough. With no job and little money, Niceguy worried about where he would get his next meal. He couldn’t afford to rent a room.

“I keep thinking, where am I going to sleep when it’s dark?” he says. He remembers shivering one night on the tile floor of his friend’s room and deciding to go back to Nigeria. The next day he told his friend about his decision, and his friend scolded him: “You have two hands, two legs. It would be a disgrace to go back.”

Niceguy buckled down and tried his hand at whatever job would bring him some money — escorting new traders to the markets or selling cheap bracelets. He did manage to get on his feet, though he still faced the major obstacle of extending his visa.

Deciding To Stay Without A Visa

Most Nigerian traders enter China with a 30-day visa. Extensions are hard to come by and expensive — an agent might secure one for around $3,000. After 30 days, many traders have to decide whether to go home, or stay without a visa and take their chances.

Niceguy was refused a visa extension, but decided to stay in the country without one.

Fortunato crossed that bridge years ago. He’s been living without a visa since 2007, and says he’s not afraid of being caught.

“What you do is you just keep moving and say to yourself whatever happens, it happens,” he says.

He’s had one close call on the street in front of the Tangqi market. One evening while he was standing at the curb waiting to cross the street, a policeman asked for his passport. Fortunato ran away.

If a trader is caught, he or she might be able to bribe their way out for hundreds or thousands of dollars before they are taken to prison, where a bribe would become even more costly.
A trader who goes by the name Fortunato  he says it's his designer name  stands outside one of the clothing shops in the Little Africa section of Guangzhou. He's been living in the Chinese city for five years.

Nina Porzucki for NPR

A trader who goes by the name Fortunato — he says it’s his “designer name” — stands outside one of the clothing shops in the Little Africa section of Guangzhou. He’s been living in the Chinese city for five years.

Many Nigerian traders at the Tangqi market have overstayed their visas; that doesn’t slow down business, but it has created a certain tension. “Anything could happen,” says Fortunato. “When you push somebody so close to the wall, he has to react.”

A Confrontation With Police

In July 2009, traders did react.

Plainclothes officers raided Tangqi market in search of illegal currency traders, and this touched off a near riot. Undocumented traders fled from the mall in fear. One man frantic to escape jumped from an upper-story window. An angry mob carried his injured body to the police station, stopping traffic and sparking an extremely rare foreigner-led protest in China.

Lu Shaye, director general of African Affairs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing, understands that opening up trade has its challenges.

He recites a familiar line of the Chinese leader who opened the country’s economy: “As Deng Xiaoping said, ‘Once we open our window, flies and mosquitoes will come in as well.’”

Immigration is one of the issues that China will face as it continues to open up, says Lu. This past December, China began to draft new legislation on the exit and entry of foreigners to update China’s first laws on immigration enacted in 1985.

Today, the Tangqi trading mall is doing business as usual. Traders walk the halls checking out the clothing for sale, shaking hands and making deals. Everyday at noon, the rip of packing tape stops, Bibles are passed around, and the men stand in the hallway to pray.

One of the loudest prayers comes from Niceguy. He’s come a long way from sleeping on the floor. He and Fortunato now rent a modern apartment in one of Guangzhou’s new suburbs. They hope to expand to the jeans market. But even if they just keep selling out of each batch of shirts, that’s good enough for now.

Nina Porzucki is NPR’s Above the Fray fellow. She spent a month in Guangzhou, China, reporting on the Little Africa community.

Marriott to Double Number of Hotels in China as Tourism Grows

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Bloomberg – Marriott International Inc. (MAR) (MAR), the
largest publicly traded U.S. hotel chain, plans to double the
number of hotels in China by 2014 to meet growing demand in the
world’s third-largest tourism destination.

Marriott, whose brands include Ritz-Carlton and Courtyard,
will open about 50 hotels in China, where it currently has 58 in
its biggest market after the U.S., Asia-Pacific Chief Operations
Officer Craig Smith said in an interview in Shanghai yesterday.

“China is big for us,” Smith said. “This is a vibrant
part of the world. Part of our job is to make sure that we
develop our plans to capitalize on the growth here.”

Marriott is expanding even as China’s economic growth
slowed to almost a three-year low of 8.1 percent in the first
quarter. The number of internationally branded hotel rooms in
China is expected to surge 52 percent by 2013 after rising 62
percent in the past five years, according to Jones Lang LaSalle
Hotels, which tracks data in 30 Chinese cities.

“The economy of Asia is really led by the power house in
China,” Smith said. “It’s going to continue to grow.”

Marriott, based in Bethesda, Maryland, began operation in
Asia in 1989 and manages about 134 hotels in the region. It
plans to increase the number to 150 by the end of the year, led
by openings in China and India, according to Smith.

Smaller Cities

The company, which opened a 342-room Renaissance hotel this
week in Huizhou of southern Guangdong province, is not concerned
about occupancy rates and over supply in China’s less affluent
second-and-third tier cities, Smith said.

“In those cities, it happens sometimes that people knock
on our door and say I want a 600-room hotel or a Ritz-Carlton,”
he said. “We go back and say you don’t need that. You’ll tell
the owners the truth at front and make sure they have the right
brand.”

Marriott, managing all their hotels in China, expects
demand will outweigh the supply in the long run in the second-
and-third tier cities, so long as they are in the right
locations and have branding power, Smith said.

China is the world’s third-largest tourism destination,
according to the World Tourism Organization.

Starwood Hotels Resorts Worldwide Inc. (HOT) (HOT) expects China
resort business to provide growth in the next 10 to 15 years,
Chief Executive Officer Frits van Paasschen said in an interview
last week. InterContinental Hotels Group Plc (IHG), owner of the
Holiday Inn brand, will begin opening locations as soon as next
year under a new brand designed to appeal to Chinese travelers,
Chief Executive Officer Richard Solomons said in an interview
last month.

Forbes Travel Guide Launches In Shanghai, China

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SHANGHAI, April 25, 2012 /PRNewswire/ — Forbes Travel Guide, the originators of the prestigious Five-Star ratings program in the U.S., added Shanghai, China as its newest global destination.  This announcement is marked by the addition of two properties, The Peninsula Shanghai and Waldorf Astoria Shanghai on the Bund, to the prestigious Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star hotel list, while The Peninsula Spa by ESPA is the only property in Shanghai to achieve the Five-Star Spa award. These properties join an elite group of 57 hotels, 25 restaurants, and 30 hotel spas in the Americas and Asia to achieve the Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star status.  Among the newly rated properties in Shanghai, 14 hotels and 8 spas were awarded the esteemed Forbes Travel Guide Four-Star award.

Shane O’Flaherty, Forbes Travel Guide President of Global Ratings and Inspections said: “In a short period of time, Shanghai has captured the minds and the hearts of our inspection team. Not only have the properties performed exceptionally well in high-end facilities and services, but the destination as a whole is truly one of the most exciting cities in the world.”

In addition to the Star-Award winning properties, the travel experts at Forbes Travel Guide and its online home, Startle.com, will introduce five new editorially selected awards to highlight the outstanding attributes of the top hotels in Shanghai.  Five properties will be designated in the new category of Top Hotel awards. These winners include:

Top Boutique Hotel – The Langham, Xintiandi, Shanghai
Top Business Hotel – The Ritz-Carlton Shanghai, Pudong
Top Historic Hotel – Fairmont Peace Hotel
Top New Hotel –Kerry Hotel, Pudong, Shanghai
Top Technology Hotel- The Peninsula Shanghai

Shanghai owns the highest number of Five- and Four-Star hotel and spa winners among the cities rated by Forbes Travel Guide. In 2011, the total tourism revenue of Shanghai reached CNY 278.654 billion with over 230.8 million domestic visitors and USD 5.835 billion from the 8.1 million overseas inbound visitors, as a result of increased international events, local lifestyle evolution, and developing infrastructure to meet the growing demands for luxury by discerning travelers.

The significant market demand for superior accommodations has accelerated both Shanghai’s hotel facilities and international service standards.  The Peninsula Shanghai and Waldorf Astoria Shanghai on the Bund consistently delivered exceptional guest experience to achieve Forbes Travel Guide’s Five-Star award.  The addition brings the total number of Five-Star Hotels to 59 worldwide.

Forbes Travel Guide, formerly Mobil Travel Guide, is the originator of the prestigious Five-Star hospitality ratings and certifications system, and has provided the most comprehensive ratings and reviews of hotels, restaurants and spas since its founding in 1958. Its system of inspections and ratings sets it apart as the undisputed authority on the finest hotels, restaurants and spas across the U.S., in Asian markets including Beijing, Hong Kong, Macau, Singapore and now Shanghai, China.

Shanghai, the destination and its award-winning properties are showcased on Startle.com, the online home of Forbes Travel Guide. The site features access to some of the world’s leadings hospitality brands and travel industry experts, with credible reviews and original answers to the questions of travel from Forbes Travel Guide editors and inspectors.

Detailed inspections
The Forbes Travel Guide inspection process includes unannounced visits by a professional inspector during which more than 550 service standards are evaluated throughout the property, as well as an announced inspection during which the inspector examines the cleanliness and condition of the property. The hotels and spas in Shanghai awarded Forbes Travel Guide Five- and Four-Star designations have met or exceeded the company’s high standards for service and facilities.  For a detailed explanation of how Forbes Travel Guide compiles its Star Ratings, visit www.startle.com, the online home of Forbes Travel Guide.

Follow Startle on Twitter: www.twitter.com/StartleMeNow
Follow Startle on Facebook: www.facebook.com/StartleMeNow
Follow Forbes Travel Guide on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ForbesInspector

ABOUT FORBES TRAVEL GUIDE
Forbes Travel Guide, formerly Mobil Travel Guide and originator of the prestigious Mobil Star ratings and certifications, has provided the most comprehensive ratings and reviews of hotels, restaurants and spas since 1958. In October 2009, Mobil Travel Guide announced a strategic partnership with Forbes Media LLC.  This exclusive licensing agreement between two industry leaders with more than 140 years of combined experience transferred the hospitality industry’s premier star rating and travel guide brand from ExxonMobil to Forbes. Forbes Travel Guide has a team of expert inspectors who anonymously evaluate properties against rigorous and objective proprietary standards, providing consumers the insight to make better-informed travel and leisure decisions.

Jeff Arnold serves as Chairman, and Michael Cascone is President and Chief Operating Officer.

ABOUT STARTLE
Startle is the online destination and social media platform for Forbes Travel Guide. This unique new platform combines answers to the questions of travel from the unparalleled insights of the Forbes Travel Guide inspectors, hospitality experts from the world’s leading luxury brands, and some of the most respected travel experts in the industry. With Startle’s expert content, social connections, curated lists, and exclusive offers and experiences, Startle delivers a one-of-a-kind destination online for the most discerning travelers.

ABOUT FORBES MEDIA LLC

Forbes Media encompasses Forbes and Forbes.com (www.forbes.com), the leading business site on the Web that reaches on average more than 21 million people monthly. The company publishes Forbes and Forbes Asia, which together reach a worldwide audience of more than 6 million readers. It also publishes ForbesLife magazine, in addition to licensee editions in Africa, Argentina, Bulgaria, China, Croatia, Czech Republic, India, Indonesia, Israel, Kazakhstan, Korea, Latvia, Middle East, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Turkey, and Ukraine.

Other Forbes media Web sites are ForbesWoman.com; RealClearPolitics.com; RealClearmarkets.com; RealClearSports.com and RealClearworld.com. Together with Forbes.com, these sites reach on average nearly 28 million business decision makers each month.

Steve Forbes serves as Chairman and Editor in Chief. Mike Perlis is President and Chief Executive Officer. Lewis D’Vorkin is Chief Product Officer. Meredith Kopit Levien is Chief Revenue Officer.

2012 Shanghai Forbes Travel Guide Five-, Four- and Three-Star Award Winners
Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star Winners (2 Hotels; 1 Spa)
Forbes Travel Guide Four-Star Winners (14 Hotels; 8 Spas)
Forbes Travel Guide Three-Star Winners (5 Hotels)

SHANGHAI
Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star Hotels
The Peninsula Shanghai
Waldorf Astoria Shanghai on the Bund

Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star Spas
The Peninsula Spa by ESPA, Shanghai

Forbes Travel Guide Four-Star Hotels
Fairmont Peace Hotel
Four Seasons Hotel Shanghai
Grand Hyatt Shanghai
InterContinental Shanghai Puxi
InterContinental Shanghai Expo
Jumeirah Himalayas Hotel
JW Marriott Hotel Shanghai at Tomorrow Square
Kerry Hotel, Pudong, Shanghai
Park Hyatt Shanghai
Pudong Shangri-La, Shanghai
The Langham, Xintiandi, Shanghai
The Portman Ritz-Carlton, Shanghai
The PuLi Hotel and Spa
The Ritz-Carlton Shanghai, Pudong

Forbes Travel Guide Four-Star Spas
Willow Stream Spa, Fairmont Peace Hotel
Qin The Spa, Four Seasons Hotel Shanghai
Spa InterContinental, InterContinental Shanghai Expo
Mandara Spa, JW Marriott Hotel at Tomorrow Square
Water’s Edge, Shanghai, Park Hyatt Shanghai
Chuan Spa, The Langham, Xintiandi, Shanghai
Anantara Spa, The PuLi Hotel and Spa
The Ritz-Carlton Shanghai, Pudong Spa by ESPA

Forbes Travel Guide Three-Star Hotels
Gran Melia Shanghai
Millennium Hongqiao Hotel Shanghai
Shanghai JC Mandarin
Sheraton Shanghai Pudong Hotel Residences
Swissotel Grand Shanghai

Top Boutique Hotel
The Langham, Xintiandi, Shanghai

Top Business Hotel
The Ritz-Carlton Shanghai, Pudong

Top Historic Hotel
Fairmont Peace Hotel

Top New Hotel
Kerry Hotel, Pudong, Shanghai

Top Technology Hotel
The Peninsula Shanghai

Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved

8 Luxury Travel Trends for Summer 2012

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As we approach the busy summer travel season, one trend is holding strong, at least according to top luxury hotel brands: People are traveling more, often for longer periods of time, with extended families, friends, and children.  They want their hard-earned time away to be worth it, with money going towards both value-added and exclusive experiences.

“As the economy continues to rebound, we’re seeing strong growth in the Consumer Confidence and Traveler Sentiment indexes, which translates into guests taking longer and more frequent vacations across all channels,” says Jennifer Fox, President of Fairmont Hotels Resorts.

Other top luxury brands like Ritz-Carlton, Mandarin Oriental, Orient-Express, and the Regent Seven Seas cruise line are seeing similar growth, while top travel agents have a hand in planning these requests for an exceptional experience.  Stacy Small, president of L.A.-based Elite Travel International, designs high-end itineraries for clients around the world and is seeing requests roll in for exotic getaways, but also from those wanting to recharge domestically.

Most of these trends aren’t groundbreaking, but are still at the forefront for luxury travel demand in Summer 2012.

Multi-Generational Family Travel: Cruising is possibly the best way to avoid family arguments, because each person can design their own day while still connecting with their family on board.  But luxury travelers don’t want to be nickel-and-dimed, and want the ease of travel while cruising.  Regent Seven Seas proves that all-inclusive doesn’t mean cheap, and provides gourmet dining, fine wines spirits, a selection of shore excursions in all ports, onboard tips, and a complimentary overnight stay in a luxury hotel prior to the cruise.  Mark Conroy, President of Regent Seven Seas Cruises, says, “Families as small as six as and as many as 35 are taking advantage of the all-inclusive, elegant, destination-focused, hassle-free cruises.”   Conroy’s favorite itineraries include a 7-night itinerary from Athens to Venice if you’re pressed for time or a cruise through the Best of the Dalmatian Coast, Italy, and the French Riviera.

Regent Seven Seas Cruise

Hotels are seeing the same trend of larger family groups traveling together.  Emily Snyder, Vice President of Sales Marketing for the Americas with Mandarin Oriental, says they are “seeing increased lengths of stay and multiple room bookings to accommodate multi-generational travel.”

High-end villa rentals are also a popular choice for families celebrating big anniversaries or birthdays, with Stacy Small saying she’s booking villas “everywhere from Hawaii to Mexico to St. Barts to the South of France for the upcoming summer season.” Extra-large villas can accommodate multiple families and provide a great base for celebrations.

Active Vacations: Luxury travelers are seeking out ways to stay active and healthy on the road, carving out time for bike rides, hiking, and water sports.  Small says that clients “want to go to places where they have plenty of options to take day trips and enjoy active excursions from trekking and diving in Vietnam to fly fishing and white water rafting in Park City, Utah and Colorado.”

Bespoke Itineraries With a Sense of Place: Travel should be personalized.  That’s nothing newsworthy.  But hotels are learning to blend experiences that are tailored to personal desires along with truly special options that reflect the destination.  Orient-Express has a knack for taking historic, priceless properties and turning them into some of the finest hotels in the world.  Flip Boyen, Chief Operating Officer for Orient-Express Hotels Resorts, says that “All of our properties are gearing up for summer travel with a selection of customized offerings, which blend authentic destination experience with the luxurious Orient-Express style.”  Their Maroma Resort Spa in Riviera Spa features a roster of health and wellness treatments that weaves together ancient Mayan traditions.

Seeking Out What’s Next New: Stacy Small says, “Clients are asking us to book them to places they haven’t been before.  We’ve booked one family to Peru inclusive of a few days aboard the ultra-luxe Aqua Expeditions through the Peruvian Amazon, and another family is taking the kids to Turkey for a few days prior to their Greek island cruise.” While certain destinations like London, Paris, and Rome never go out of style, Fairmont Hotels Resorts says their properties in Shanghai, Singapore, Dubai and Kenya are experiencing “ever increasing popularity” which bodes well for their new hotel openings in Kiev, Baku, and Jaipur this year.

Increase In Brazil China Travelers to United States: Emily Snyder with Mandarin Oriental mentions the U.S. Travel Tourism’s new Brand USA Campaign as a key factor in helping to drive international tourism, particularly from Brazil and China.  And Snyder says they’re taking extra care of these guests and says that “mainland Chinese guests, for example, receive tailored amenities to enhance their comfort, such as tea kettles in room, and special Chinese menu items.”

Travel + Leisure Names Seven Cups Teahouse One of Six Best Places to Drink Tea …

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Travel + Leisure’s wine editor travels to China to find the maker of one of China’s legendary teas inspired by a cup of tea he drank in one of America’s premier teahouses.

Tucson, AZ (PRWEB) April 25, 2012

Travel + Leisure’s tea fanatic and wine editor, Bruce Schoenfeld, first tasted da hong pao, a rare Chinese oolong tea, at Seven Cups Teahouse in Tucson, where Austin Hodge serves teas he sources in remote regions of China.

That was the start of Schoenfeld’s long journey to meet the man who grows this tea at a single source – the stony slopes of Wu Yi Mountains in Fujian, China.

He writes of this journey in the May 2012 edition of Travel + Leisure where he names Seven Cups among six Best Places to Drink Tea in America. He recommends Liu Guo Ying’s da hong pao and notes “Hodge, the only American with a license to export tea from China, sources the best of the best from Wuyishan, Yunnan, Qimen, Anxi and beyond.”

When Schoenfeld tasted this tea at Seven Cups Teahouse it “altered my tea-drinking life,” he wrote. This tea is “rare, expensive, and frequently counterfeited, but this one was authentic. And it kept getting better – richer and rounder with every cup.”

Schoenfeld admits he is tea obsessive. After he tasted da hong pao in Tucson he flew around the world, guided by Austin Hodge who introduced him to Master Liu who consented to lead them to his mountain-top tea garden that few outsiders have ever seen. “Liu is a rock star in the Chinese tea world, the only grower to be awarded a citation by the government for innovation in a traditional art,” Schoenfeld wrote.

“I was there in search of the terroir of my favorite teas – just as I’ve flown around the world to see the vineyards and meet the winemakers so I can better understand my favorite wines.”

The character of tea is largely determined by where and how it is grown. However, the taste of tea also has as much to do with the skill of who’s brewing it, Schoenfeld noted.

At Seven Cups Teahouse the exotic da hong pao could well be prepared by Zhuping Hodge, a certified Chinese Tea Master and native of China. She’s Austin’s wife and currently is leading a tour in China. She often demonstrates a traditional tea ceremony and on most Friday afternoons offers complimentary tea tastings at a rare and intricate wooden tea table carved from a single root. The Tucson teahouse is located at 2516 E. 6th St. in the historic Village of Sam Hughes.

Many of the teas available through Seven Cups have only been available to the Western world in the last 10 years. During that time, Hodge, founder and president of Seven Cups, traveled throughout China and cultivated relationships with tea farmers who use traditional methods passed down through the centuries. Seven Cups currently source teas from 30 producers in 10 different regions of China, homeland of the world’s first and finest teas, Hodge said.

Seven Cups has solid relationships in China with tea producers, tea masters and government officials. This is the only American tea company to obtain a license to export tea directly from China with no middleman.

“From our beginnings, Seven Cups has been dedicated to open sourcing and establishing a direct connection between the artists who make the tea and the people who drink it. I hope that Bruce’s article will spur the tea industry to be more open about who makes their tea,” Hodge said.

Tea aficionados don’t have to travel to Tucson to discover da hong pao. Seven Cups sells Chinese tea online to connoisseurs in more than 90 countries. The company also supplies tea to other exclusive tea business in Denmark, Brazil, Canada and the United States. They also host two tea tours every year for tea professionals and enthusiasts.

Seven Cups was founded in 2002 to sell Chinese teas to aficionados worldwide and opened its first teahouse in Tucson in 2004. Last year the company launched an international brokerage service offering small tea companies access to its extensive network of connoisseur-quality teas direct from farmers in China at an affordable price and in manageable quantities.

Hodge writes a widely read blog and has been extensively published within China. In 2011 Hodge became the only foreigner given “The Top Ten Outstanding Persons of China” award. presented by the Chinese tea community for his contributions in promoting Fine Chinese Teas. For more information, visit http://www.sevencups.com.

To read Schoenfeld’s full tea report, visit http://www.travelandleisure.com/articles/a-global-guide-to-the-best-tea.html.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2012/4/prweb9433860.htm

China and Seychelles continue to push Creole island holidays

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Tourism cooperation continues to grow

China and Seychelles continue to push Creole island holidays

Mr. Zhang Shigang, President of the China Travel Service (CTS), and Mr. Wayne Xu, his Assistant President, received Alain St.Ange, the Seychelles Minister for Tourism and Culture, and Elsia Grandcourt, the CEO of the Seychelles Tourism Board, at their Head Office in Beijing in China to discuss the continued push of Seychelles holidays by CTS right across China.

Minister St.Ange and Madame Grandcourt, accompanied by Glynn Burridge, the Board Copy Writer and Consultant, and by Jean Luc Lai Lam and Lee Huanhuan, the Seychelles Tourism Board Managers based in Beijing, were briefed by the CTS President on forward bookings for Seychelles and their commitment to continue to develop packages to Seychelles for Chinese holidaymakers.

After touring the Head Office of CTS in Beijing, Minister St.Ange said that Seychelles valued the support of CTS and remained committed to working with them. The Seychelles Minister took the opportunity of their presence at the CTS Head Office to invite Mr. Zhang Shigang, President of CTS, to visit Seychelles in July during the Routes Africa 2012 Forum. “This will be an excellent opportunity for you to meet all airlines connecting Seychelles from China through these airlines’ respective hubs. We are happy to hear that your first big group of 152 holidaymakers earlier this year on board Ethiopian Airlines was deemed successful and that subsequent smaller groups have all given Seychelles their thumbs up as a great holiday destination. We now need you, as President of CTS, to see and experience Seychelles as we move forward to the consolidation of our relationship,” Minister Alain St.Ange said to Mr. Zhang Shigang.

Seychelles has been working hard to diversify their tourism markets, and China was identified as a target market at the Board’s 2011 Marketing Meeting, which sees all the Tourism Board’s Overseas Managers rally for their annual strategizing meeting. “The Overseas Tourism Board Offices last year, as they have done for the last two years, spent quality time with the private sector trade during the annual marketing meeting, saying what they saw as trends in their respective markets, and they took on board the points of view of the local tourism entrepreneurs before meeting in the session to map out the Tourism Board’s strategy for the coming year. It was at that 2011 meeting, held alongside the La Reunion Marketing Team, that the Seychelles Tourism Board decided to focus on the policy of diversification of the tourism markets for Seychelles,” Minister Alain St.Ange said.

Today it is proven that this plan of action by the Seychelles Tourism Board Marketing Team was right and that it was bearing fruits for the islands’ tourism industry.

China considers archive of foreigners

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BEIJING, April 24 (UPI) — Chinese lawmakers Tuesday proposed creating a nationwide database to house information about foreigners in the country.

The archive would replace the current system, which was set up by different administrations and is only accessible by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, making it difficult to track down people who overstay their visas or work illegally, China Daily reported.

“Investigating illegal staying and employment heavily relies on public tip-offs,” said Zhao Yu, a professor of foreign public security.

The proposed law would give information on foreigners to the appropriate government departments, for example the Ministry of Education would receive records of overseas students in China and the Ministry of Human Resources would have records of people in the country on work visas.

Experts say the reform is needed as travel into and out of China has greatly increased since the country opened up to visitors in the 1970s. There were 260 million arrivals and departures from January to September in 2011, the Public Security and Foreign Affairs ministries said, compared with 12.1 million in 1980.

Because of an increase in travel to China, the number of cases of illegal entry, staying and employment has also increased, officials said, with 13,000 of such cases being reported by Beijing’s Public Security Bureau’s arrival and departure department since 2008.

China to open Xisha Islands to tourism this year

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HAIKOU, April 24 (Xinhua) — China plans to let tourists visit the Xisha Islands in the South China Sea this year, the vice governor of Hainan province, which administers the group of islands, said Tuesday.

“Xisha must be opened for tourism within this year,” Tan Li said at a provincial conference addressing tourism on Tuesday.

Tan said that relevant departments are making preparations in accordance with this timetable.

China’s State Council in late 2009 announced a guideline to develop the tropical island province of Hainan into a destination for international tourists, and the guideline also outlined that tourism would be promoted on the Xisha Islands.

The Xisha Islands are a cluster of close to 40 islets, sandbanks and reefs.

Earlier this month, a cruise ship owned by the Hainan Strait Shipping Co. launched a trial voyage to the islands.

Vietnam claims sovereignty over the Xisha Islands. However, China has reiterated that its sovereignty over the Xisha Islands is indisputable.

Despite Official Ban, Facebook Accessible in China

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Chinese Internet users took advantage of an apparent glitch in the country’s extensive web censorship program Tuesday by accessing Facebook, which is usually blocked in the tightly controlled communist country.

Internet users across the country reported being able to access the social networking website early Tuesday. VOA’s Beijing bureau was able to visit the site using the prefix “HTTPS” instead of the usual “HTTP,” which is a way of accessing websites using a secure connection.

Steven Millward, the China editor at TechInAsia.com, told VOA such temporary holes are common in the so-called “Great Firewall of China,” which restricts access to popular foreign websites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

“We’ve seen glitches for a few hours, or even a few days, before. Unfortunately, things don’t seem to come back from the dead. Not since 2009, when things got much stricter in terms of web filtering. So I’d err on the side of caution and say, unfortunately, it’s just a glitch, so enjoy it while you can.”

Although Facebook was still accessible at VOA’s Beijing office as of late afternoon local time, many others posted messages on another social networking site – Twitter – saying the Facebook site had been re-blocked.

China, which boasts the world’s largest online population, says its online censorship policies are aimed at maintaining social stability, and that it will help stop the spread of false rumors and inappropriate material.

About half of China’s estimated 500 million Internet citizens use popular local microblog services, known as weibos, which are more easily censored by government monitors.

Technically savvy Internet users are often able to bypass the firewall and access foreign websites using a virtual private network, or VPN, which redirects Internet traffic through an external server and helps keeps browsing history private.

Millward says there could be up to 700,000 users of Facebook in China, despite the official ban.

Facebook has been blocked in China since 2009, when Uighur activists made a series of online posts on the site encouraging protests in the northwest region of Xinjiang.

Authorities at the time said they were “punishing” the California-based company for being a medium for what they said was a Xinjiang independence movement.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has made several recent visits to China. His latest trip – a vacation to Shanghai last month – sparked rumors that he was trying to bring Facebook back to the Chinese market.

Zuckerberg has previously expressed interest in doing business in China, telling audiences, “How can you connect the whole world if you leave out 1.6 billion people?”

Chinese tour operators urged Thai government to take care of 3 issues

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Mr. Sansern Ngao-rungsi, deputy governor for TAT Asia and the South Pacific, has revealed that during Prime Minister Yingluck’s recent trip to China, she had an opportunity to discuss with executives of major Chinese tour operators on 3 main issues: tourists safety, a visa processing time, and the quality of travel programs.

To better service the increasing number of inbound Chinese travelers to Thailand, executives of Chinese travel agents have requested that the Thai government pay attention to tourists’ safety and security and that visa processing time be shortened from 5 days to 3 days for more convenience. Lastly, they wished to see Thailand offers superior tour programs and services.

In 2011, 1.7 million Chinese visitors traveled to Thailand. It is anticipated that the number for 2012 should reach 2 million and generate approximately 50 billion baht revenue.