Yuthasak Supasorn, governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), is urging tourism businesses to guard against Covid-19 infections in preparation for the return of Chinese tourists.
According to the Bangkok Post, Yuthasak said staff on the frontline, such as hotel receptionists, drivers and tour guides, should get a booster shot.

Hotels, restaurants and tour operators are also reminded to strictly comply with Safety and Health Administration (SHA) standards, he said.
Government spokesman Anucha Burapachaisri said on Sunday that prime minister Prayut Chan-o-cha had instructed the Tourism and Sports Ministry and the Public Health Ministry to come up with measures to ensure the health and safety of the public as foreign arrivals swell this year.
While TAT had initially set its foreign arrivals target for 2023 at 20 million, China’s reopening announcement in December has led the bureau to raise its expectations to 25 million.
China will resume ordinary passports applications for tourism on January 8.
Anucha expects some 300,000 tourists from China to arrive in the first quarter of this year.

























The Philippines has been preparing for the influx of Chinese tourists long before China announced its reopening on January 8.
Preparations cover three main areas: negotiations to resume commercial and charter flights; e-visa platform to expedite visa application processes; and the launch of cruise tourism in February 2023.
The Department of Tourism (DOT) is “in close coordination with tourism attaches in Beijing and Shanghai to ensure that we continue the efforts of resuming flights both commercial and chartered,” said tourism secretary Christina Garcia Frasco in a December 19 press briefing.
So far, Philippine Airlines (PAL) has announced resuming services between Manila and Xiamen starting January 13 with a weekly flight, but “will build up frequencies over time, in line with the easing of restrictions and applicable government authorisations”.
PAL had previously served five Chinese cities from Manila – Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Xiamen and Quanzhou (Jinjiang) – prior to the pandemic. It continued to operate several regular charter flights during the pandemic.
The DOT has also proposed to the Department of Foreign Affairs the provision of e-visa platform in certain key source markets including China and India to expedite visa and other travel requirements into the Philippines.
Verna Buensuceso, DOT assistant secretary for product and market development and officer-in-charge – undersecretary, tourism development, explained: “E-visa is something we have pushed and would like to prioritise in (source) markets that have big groups, hopefully China and India. These are areas we have very limited foreign posts and it will really facilitate the processing if we have an e-visa system.”
Buensuceso said they are also looking at other possibilities, such as establishing a system for expediting group visas.
By February, cruise tourism will be launched with at least 156 ports of call across 40 island destinations, a new product for inbound, including Chinese tourists, Frasco said.
She emphasised that China, once the country’s second biggest inbound market, “is still very much on the horizon” considering that at some point it provided over 1.2 million tourists into the Philippines. As such, efforts towards resuming Chinese arrivals have not stopped.