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TAIWAN NEWS
Taiwan says China ties have halved fraud cases
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) Jan 31, 2014


Record 2.85 million Chinese visited Taiwan in 2013
Taipei (AFP) Feb 01, 2014 - Taiwan said Saturday a record 2.85 million Chinese nationals visited the island last year, up ten percent from 2012 although group arrivals dropped slightly after Beijing enacted a tourism law.

The number of solo Chinese travellers surged 174 percent to 522,000 people compared with 191,000 in 2012, the government said.

But group arrivals fell 4.6 percent to 1.69 million, after Beijing outlawed forced shopping trips prompting operators to raise the price of package tours, officials said.

The dramatic rise in tourist numbers is indicative of the increasingly warm ties between Taiwan and China.

Once bitter foes, Taipei and Beijing have had no official contact in 65 years.

But relations have improved significantly since Ma Ying-jeou of the Beijing-friendly Kuomintang party came to power in 2008. He was re-elected in January 2012.

This month a minister from Taipei will visit the mainland in the two sides' first official contact in six decades.

The number of tourists visiting Taiwan from the mainland has shot up ever since Taipei lifted a ban on Chinese group tourists in 2008 and allowed solo tourists in mid-2011.

Taiwan further raised its quota for individual travellers to 3,000 a day in December 2013, hoping it will reduce the impact of the ban on forced shopping trips.

China enacted the law to try and stamp out the unpopular industry practice of taking tour groups on trips that were subsidised but took tourists to specific retailers where they were compelled to buy products.

China has replaced Japan to become the biggest source of visitors to Taiwan.

However, Beijing still considers Taiwan part of its territory awaiting reunification, by force if necessary, even though the sides have been governed separately since the end of a civil war in 1949.

Taiwan's fraud cases have fallen more than 50 percent in the four years since the island teamed up with China to fight growing Internet and telephone scams, the government said Friday.

A total of 17,744 cases were reported in 2013 involving Tw$3.77 billion ($126 million) in losses. That was down 54.3 percent from the 38,802 cases involving Tw$10.27 billion in 2009, according to data released by Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council.

China was a favourite destination for Taiwanese criminals hoping to evade arrest until Taipei and Beijing signed a crime-fighting agreement in 2009 amid improving ties. Nearly 6,000 suspects have been arrested since.

Under the agreement, the two sides have been collaborating in information-sharing, coordinating raids and extraditing criminals to crack down on crimes including fraud, drug smuggling and currency counterfeit.

In one of the largest busts, more than 800 people were arrested in 2011 across Taiwan, China and Southeast Asia in coordinated raids, according to Taiwanese police.

Last year, a gang leader and one of Taiwan's most wanted criminals was extradited to the island from China, where he fled 17 years ago.

Taiwan and China split in 1949 after a civil war, but Beijing still sees the island as part of its territory awaiting reunification -- by force if necessary.

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Related Links
Taiwan News at SinoDaily.com






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