nzherald.co.nz

Editorial: Govt's deal with one airline wrong

5:30 AM Monday Nov 19, 2012
Immigration Minister Nathan Guy said the visitors would still need a visa to enter and still face health and character checks. Photo / Paul Brooks

Immigration Minister Nathan Guy said the visitors would still need a visa to enter and still face health and character checks. Photo / Paul Brooks

These are lean times for tourism. One of the few bright spots on the horizon is China, where increasing numbers of wealthy residents are looking to visit other countries now that they are permitted to do so. New Zealand is competing with 140 other destinations to attract them and appears to be doing quite well.

Heavy investment by airlines and airports has seen Chinese visitor numbers grow from about 30,000 in 2000 to around 180,000 this year. The Chinese do not stay long - an average of six days, 10 fewer than the average overall - but their total spending while here exceeds that of British visitors, making China already our second largest tourism market, behind Australia.

China's largest airline, Guangzhou-based China Southern Airlines, began daily flights to Auckland a year ago and its promotion of this destination has been credited with much of the growth. It is bringing 250 Chinese travel agents to Auckland next month to see the region's attractions and meet business leaders.

What a pity then, that the Government has done a deal with China Southern to relax visa requirements for its frequent flyer card holders, raising questions in Parliament last week. In itself, the deal sounds innocuous - passengers wealthy enough to be frequent flyers will not face the usual requirement to show they have sufficient funds to support themselves - but Immigration New Zealand should not be doing this sort of deal with a single airline no matter how beneficial it has been. Immigration Minister Nathan Guy said the visitors would still need a visa to enter and still face health and character checks. But the deal has worried the department's Intelligence Risk and Integrity Division which is annoyed that it was not consulted until the discussions were well advanced.

Its manager said in an internal memo leaked to Winston Peters: "One of the key risks is imported criminality but because this is not a recognised adverse outcome for Immigration NZ it seems to be ignored." The manager believed the deal "sets a dangerous precedent" and he said China Southern's record in supplying correct passenger information was "very patchy".

Mr Peters has thickened the plot by producing a travel magazine article in which SkyCity casino's president of international business boasts of "working closely with China Southern Airlines to bring VIP gamblers into Auckland seamlessly". The article said, "the casino was in talks to make the visa process easier".

The minister says he is not aware of any SkyCity involvement in the deal and the casino says that while it was "always talking to the Government" about easing customers' visa requirements, it was not involved in China Southern's arrangement. There is nothing to suggest the deal will allow criminals to enter the country more easily. The removal of an obligation to show evidence of sufficient funds would not make much difference to a high roller who wanted to come here to spend ill-gotten gains at the casino. The suggestion is an unfair smear on the airline and its card holders in the absence of any evidence to support it.

But it is the sort of slight the Government invites when it gets too close to a commercial operator. Its pokie deal with SkyCity is still under an Audit Office investigation.

China Southern Airlines is clearly doing well for New Zealand and itself but so is Air New Zealand on its China services. If immigration can safely do anything to ease travel it should do so for all. It should not be in one airline's favour.

Gavin Whitelaw (Italy) | 08:58AM Monday, 19 Nov 2012
The "New Zealand experience" needs dramatic improvement for ordinary Chinese tourists. It can't be off the plane into a Chinese minibus for a visit to a Chinese knick-knack shop in Rotorua where the guide takes a cut, on to a Chinese restaurant and so to a Chinese hotel.

Those tourists might drop a certain amount of money but what they report back home isn't going to be very positive. These ordinary tourists are the thick end of the market, not the few rich guys who for some unknown reason come all the way to NZ to gamble (is that even realistic? Wouldn't they prefer Macau?).

The industry needs to take steps to tap in to the ordinary Chinese tourist market by giving them the full NZ treatment which, believe me, seems more exotic to them than any visit to Peking by a NZer.

Do this and you'll find that numbers skyrocket, and stay duration increases along with spend. If that's not done, it'll be like the Russian tourists here in Italy. Aeroflot plane Tomsk to Rimini, into a Russian-owned high rise hotel where they eat borscht and drink vodka every night while lying on the beach all day. NZ can do better (in theory, anyway).
D (Blockhouse Bay) | 08:59AM Monday, 19 Nov 2012
New Zealand's for sale and the sad thing is it's not even to the highest bidder, it doesn't matter if the Government is repping the "Bloods" or the "Crips" they still have to answer to the suit and tie gang from the Corporate World who have all the power, big business say's jump and both the Bloods leader, Shearer, and Key from the Crips will ask how high.

All the while the average Kiwi get's caught in the cross fire and losses more and more while these idiots in the gangs do all they can to please their corporate bosses, there are a few undercover agents on both gangs trying to do the right thing but they get blocked and then the gangs load up their manipulation and propaganda gats (gun for those not familiar with 90's gangsta rap) and go pop caps in ya head through the Television.
Pied Piper (Auckland Central) | 08:59AM Monday, 19 Nov 2012
Dont expect integrity from this Government they are all about money and that is all they care about, not bettering the financial position of the population of this country but lining the pockets of the wealthy, financial institutions and overseas investors. What happens to the Real Kiwis isn't a consideration. It is time we churned them.
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