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The
Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) and its Chinese
counterpart, the Taiwan Affairs Office, announced Nov.
18 that they had agreed to allow special holiday
cross-strait charter flights to operate between Jan. 20
and
Feb. 13, 2006
, similar to the formula adopted during the past Lunar
New Year.
The
scheme for next year is much broader compared to
previous cross-strait charter-flight agreements, with
governments on the two sides agreeing to relax
restrictions on passenger numbers and increase the
number of flights and destinations in
China
, according to MAC Vice Chairman Johnnason Liu.
Under
the new scheme, all Taiwanese residents will be eligible
to travel via the holiday charter flights provided they
have the proper documentation, such as entry and exit
visas. When the Lunar New Year charter flights first
took place in 2003, they were aimed at facilitating the
reunion of Taiwanese businesspeople and their families
in
China
with relatives in
Taiwan
during the holiday period.
MAC
Chairman Joseph Wu said Nov. 21 that, due to the
restrictions on passengers, there was an excess of empty
seats on the holiday charter flights this year. In order
to improve the profitability of such flights, MAC
decided to relax the restrictions in order to better
accommodate the needs of both travellers and airline
operators.
"Residents
in
Taiwan
can use the charter-flight services, including Taiwanese
people who want to travel to
China
and Chinese spouses living in
Taiwan
, as long as they have the correct documents to enter
and exit," Liu said.
According
to Liu,
Xiamen
will be another destination this year, in addition to
last year's flights to
Shanghai
,
Beijing
and
Guangzhou
. The number of flights will also increase from 48 to 72
during the 25-day period, with each side operating 36
flights.
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