Bad behavior included violating customs, destroying public infrastructure and historic sites, causing disturbances on public transport and participating in gambling and prostitution, the agency said.
“China’s image has already been tarnished,” the China National Tourism Administration said on its website.
The actions of badly behaved tourists has caused many people to ‘blush with shame’ and people who behaved badly overseas needed to ‘learn a lesson’, it added. It did not specify the nature of any punishment.
Regulators would hunt out bad behavior through tips from local tourism bureaus, media reports and the general public.
In 2013, a Chinese student sparked an outcry in Egypt after scratching his name on the wall of an ancient temple in Luxor, while a mainland couple drew ire in Hong Kong for allowing their two-year-old child to defecate on a sidewalk.
Thai authorities issued thousands of Chinese-language etiquette manuals in February after Chinese tourists were caught drying underwear at a temple, kicking a bell at a sacred shrine and washing their feet in a public restroom.
Overseas travel has boomed in recent years among increasingly affluent Chinese, who have become the world’s biggest spenders on travel since 2012, according to the U.N. World Tourism Organization.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 9th, 2015.
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