Home>News Center>China
       
 

Russian plane stunt to attract tourists
By Sun Xiaohua (China Daily)
Updated: 2006-02-28 05:44

Watching a beautiful landscape and fighter planes in a breathtaking performance the combination is making tourism officials in Hunan Province drool.

Zhangjiajie, one of the top tourism spots in Central China, thinks plenty of people will come to see 10 Russian fighter planes, including SU-30s and SU-27s, give a demonstration on March 17-19.

A SU-27 plans to fly through Tianmen Cave, the highest natural water-eroded cave in the world. It runs north-south with a height of 131 metres, a width of 57 metres and a depth of 60 metres. It is 28 metres wide at its narrowest.

"We have prepared for this flight performance for nearly two years," said Ye Wenzhi, planner of the performance, which is expected to cost about 52 million yuan (US$6.4 million).

Ye did a similar stunt at Zhangjiajie in 1999. This time, though, people have expressed more concern about the safety issues involved, so Ye has responded. "We have invited experts to make a comprehensive investigation," Ye said.

To prevent any loss caused by bad weather, Ye bought an insurance policy worth a record 2.7 million yuan (US$333,000) from Ping An of China.

If the performance is postponed because of weather, the organizing committee will receive 1 million yuan (US$123,000) a day.

Another factor involved is Sino-Russian relations.

"This year is the Year of Russia in China," said He Tongxin, vice- governor of Hunan Province. "It is expected that this performance will strengthen the friendship between China and Russia."

"I hope that this performance will be a big leap forward for the Zhangjiajie tourism industry," said Ye, who also manages a tourism company.

The previous flying stunt helped bring in 2.5 billion yuan (US$308 million) of tourism revenue to Zhangjiajie for the following three years. Ye expected the influence of the performance this year to be even further-reaching.

About 20,000 tickets will be sold for the three-day performance. VIP tickets for the event are selling for as much as 6,800 yuan (US$840).

(China Daily 02/28/2006 page2)



Protest against Chen Shui-bian
Job fair in Shandong
Mine rescue drill in Chengdu
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Chen scraps 'unification council, guidelines'

 

   
 

Guangdong to house oil reserve bases

 

   
 

Giant pandas free gifts for Taiwan: official

 

   
 

Japan: 'Mature' ties with China to take time

 

   
 

Concern voiced at 'Magic Call' service

 

   
 

The writing's (on the Net) on the Wall

 

   
  Taiwan's Chen abolishes unification council, guidelines
   
  Economist: Cut dollar share of forex reserves
   
  Japan: 'Mature' ties with China to take time
   
  China Merchants Bank plans US$2b IPO
   
  China to open more death penalty cases to public
   
  Overseas Chinese denounce Chen's secessionist remarks
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement