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December 16, 2014

Chinese who attacked plane crew 'barbarians': state media

POSTED: 15 Dec 2014 14:51

Malaysia-based AirAsia plane. (File photo: AFP/Roslan Rahman)

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BEIJING: Chinese state-run media branded four unruly air passengers "barbarians" Monday (Dec 15) after they scalded an air hostess and threatened to blow up a plane, in the latest embarrassment by the country's travellers.

The national tourism watchdog vowed to "punish" the group after a low-cost flight from Thailand to the eastern city of Nanjing was forced to return to Bangkok when a female Chinese passenger threw hot water and noodles at a cabin attendant. Online video images also showed another male passenger threatening to blow up the aircraft following the row with crew, reportedly because they could not be seated together.

The China Daily, which is published by the government, lambasted the group in an editorial and said the incident would "tarnish" the image of the Chinese people. "They believed that behaving like barbarians would get them what they wanted, forgetting that civility demands that a fellow human being be treated as an equal," it said.

"The incident should serve as a lesson not just for the four culprits, but also for all Chinese to behave properly to get respect." Thai AirAsia Flight FD9101 departed Bangkok's northern airport Don Mueang for Nanjing on Thursday with 174 passengers and six crew on board, but was forced to turn back after the rowdy behaviour.

China's National Tourism Administration said over the weekend that the passengers - who were reportedly given token fines by Thai authorities - will be "severely punished" for their actions and put on a database of unruly tourists. "The administration's move should be encouraged," Su Haopeng, vice dean of the Law School at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing told the Global Times.

"As it is the first time they have clearly stipulated that public behaviour should be not only punished by law, but also regulated by a record system." The passengers paid 50,000 Thai baht (US$1,525) in compensation to the air hostess, the paper said citing Thai reports, while the female passenger who threw the hot water was fined an additional 200 baht.

UGLY TOURISTS

It is the latest serious incident to involve Chinese travellers abroad, whose numbers have soared in recent years on the back of the country's economic rise.

A plane carrying 200 people from Zurich to Beijing was forced to turn back after a violent fight between two Chinese passengers in 2012. Last year the parents of a 15-year-old Chinese boy were forced to apologise after their son defaced an ancient Egyptian sandstone relic lined with hieroglyphics on the banks of the Nile.

President Xi Jinping has previously attempted to encourage Chinese tourists to be better behaved overseas, using a trip to the Maldives in September to urge them not to damage the coral reefs or litter the area with plastic water bottles. As well as the editorial, the China Daily carried a separate bylined commentary saying that it was "not the first time that a handful of 'ugly' tourists have given Chinese travellers a bad name".

It called on tourism authorities to take "strict measures" aimed at "properly handling" the increasing number of Chinese travellers. Chinese tourists made 98 million overseas trips in 2013 and that figure is expected to surpass 116 million this year, it said. "Chinese tourists should remember that their unruly behaviour would only soil their country's image," it added.

- AFP/el

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/mobile/asiapacific/chinese-who-attacked/1529784.html