• Email : daktip@vhttdl.daklak.gov.vn
  • Phone : 0262 351 77 79
  •  Dak Lak Tourism Promotion Information Center
    • Home
    • Coffee Festival
    • Introduction
      • Center
      • An overview of Daklak tourism
    • Travel Diary
      • van_chuyen
      • Destination
      • Accommodation Facilities
      • Food,Speciality
      • Travel company
      • Essential Information
      • Số hóa tài liệu
    • News
      • Local News
      • National News
      • International News
    • Video
      • Du lịch Đắk Lắk 360
    • Contact
    • Home
    • >
    • National News
    • >

    Ministry calls for tightened management on foreign tourists following Chinese visitors wearing illicit map T-shirts

    Thursday, 17-05-2018 / 9:24:12 AM
    By : Nguyễn Công Luân
    731 View

    The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism has just asked authorities in Khanh Hoa Province to intensify the management and monitoring of foreign tourists in the area.

    Ministry calls for tightened management on foreign tourists following Chinese visitors wearing illicit map T-shirts, social news, vietnamnet bridge, english news, Vietnam news, news Vietnam, vietnamnet news, Vietnam net news, Vietnam latest news, vn news,

    A group of Chinese tourists wear T-shirts with the illicit ‘nine-dash line’ map.

    The instruction was sent on Tuesday morning following a group of Chinese tourists wearing T-shirts featuring the illicit ‘nine-dash line’ map that suggests Chinese territorial claims in the East Vietnam Sea in Nha Trang.

    Head of the Security Police Department at Cam Ranh International Airport, Nguyen Van Quan, said that the group of 14 tourists arrived at the airport on the evening of May 13 on a tour operated by Aladdin Co. Ltd. in Nha Trang City.

    “After completing immigration procedures, the tourists went out to wait for buses to Nha Trang,” Quan said. “They took off their coats and only wore the T-shirts. We immediately asked them to change their clothes and confiscated all their T-shirts.”

    A representative from the tour company said that the tourists came from Xi An City in China and it was not until they had passed immigration that the company’s tour guide realised their clothes featured the map.

    “The tourists said that they found the T-shirts beautiful and bought them as their uniforms for the tour at a market in China,” Aladdin’s representative said. ‘We asked them to change shirts and confiscated all the T-shirts at the airport to be handed over to the authorities.”

    When asked about the call to expel these tourists, Quan said on May 15 that they have reported the case to the Ministry of Public Security and is waiting for further instructions.

    In 2014, a Chinese couple were also caught attempting to bring bundles of world maps showing the illicit ‘nine-dash line’ into Vietnam through the Moc Bai Border Gate in the southern province of Tay Ninh.

    The ‘nine-dash line,’ is a widely-rejected cow tongue-shaped line illegally created by China to claim its sovereignty over about 80 percent of the East Vietnam Sea, including the Paracel and Spratly archipelagos.

    Vietnamese authorities have consistently rejected China’s territorial claims with its absurd imaginary line, as they are not based on any legal foundation and violate the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

    Source : VietNamNet Bridge
    Related news
  • Vietnamese favour outbound tours to Japan, RoK during New Year holiday

    Vietnamese favour outbound tours to Japan, RoK during New Year holiday

  • Tourist arrivals to Hanoi records five-fold rise in 11 months

    Tourist arrivals to Hanoi records five-fold rise in 11 months

  • Tourism sector required to adapt to digital transformation

    Tourism sector required to adapt to digital transformation

  • Forum seeks ways to restore international tourism

    Forum seeks ways to restore international tourism

  • Latest news
  • Vietnamese favour outbound tours to Japan, RoK during New Year holiday

    Vietnamese favour outbound tours to Japan, RoK during New Year holiday

  • Tourist arrivals to Hanoi records five-fold rise in 11 months

    Tourist arrivals to Hanoi records five-fold rise in 11 months

  • Vietnam and Japan promote tourism cooperation ahead of 2024

  • Tourism sector required to adapt to digital transformation

  • Forum seeks ways to restore international tourism

  • International search volume for Vietnamese tourism continues to rise

  • Vietnam to host Mekong Tourism Forum in October

  • Ede brocade tells new story

  • Vietnam among top 20 unmissable summer vacation destinations

  • NZ Herald cites 10 reasons for visiting Vietnam

  • Local News
  • Ede brocade tells new story

    Ede brocade tells new story

  • Forum to promote tourism in Central Highlands

    Forum to promote tourism in Central Highlands

  • Không có hình ảnh

    Dreamy lake amid Central Highlands forests

  • Awakening Central Highlands tourism industry

    Awakening Central Highlands tourism industry

  • A memorable trip to Dak Lak

    A memorable trip to Dak Lak

  • MOST READ
  • 1.

    Tourism sector required to adapt to digital transformation

    Tourism sector required to adapt to digital transformation
  • 2.

    Vietnam and Japan promote tourism cooperation ahead of 2024

    Vietnam and Japan promote tourism cooperation ahead of 2024
  • 3.

    Vietnamese favour outbound tours to Japan, RoK during New Year holiday

    Vietnamese favour outbound tours to Japan, RoK during New Year holiday
  • 4.

    Tourist arrivals to Hanoi records five-fold rise in 11 months

    Tourist arrivals to Hanoi records five-fold rise in 11 months
  • Trung Tâm Thông Tin Xúc Tiến Du Lịch Đắk Lắk
    DAK LAK TOURISM INFORMATION AND PROMOTION CENTER

    Address : 12 Tran Hung Dao - Buon Ma Thuot City - Dak Lak

    Email : daktip@vhttdl.daklak.gov.vn

    Phone : 0262 351 77 79

    The copyright belongs to DakLak tourism information and promotion center. All forms of reproduction of information, images must be agreed in writing.

    Top
    Facebook
    Youtube
    Google Plus
    Twitter