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Cross-Straits charter flight sets off for Tomb-sweeping Day
SHANGHAI—A China Eastern
flight left Shanghai for Taipei on Wednesday, kicking off a series of
seasonal cross-Straits charter flights for the traditional Chinese
tomb-sweeping festival.
Altogether 146 passengers, mostly Taiwanese working in Shanghai, were on
board China Eastern’s flight MU5005 from Shanghai’s Pudongto Taipei on
Wednesday, sources with the airline company said. A total of 11 airlines
from the mainland and Taiwan will fly 21round trips from April 2-8,
according to the Civil Aviation Administration of China.
The mainland airports that operated the flights are in Beijing,
Shanghai, Guangzhou and Xiamen, while the two in Taiwan are Taipei and
Kaohsiung, the administration said. A total of 14 charter flights will
fly between Shanghai and Taipei from Wednesday to next Monday, operated
by China Eastern and Shanghai Airlines based in the mainland, and
Taiwan-based China Airlines and EVA Air.
Charter flights will also fly from Guangzhou and Xiamen to Taipei and
vice versa around the tomb-sweeping day that falls on Friday, April 4.
The day, also known as the Qingming Festival, is an occasion to remember
the dead.
This was the second time that the mainland and Taiwan have operated
charter flights during the Qingming Festival. The charter flights during
the 2007 Qingming Festival carried nearly 7,000 passengers, figures from
the administration showed. The first non-stop charter flights across the
Taiwan Straits were launched for Chinese Lunar New Year in 2005, the
first direct air links across the Straits in more than five decades. The
service is also available during important holidays, including the
traditional Dragon Boat Festival in early summer, and the Mid-Autumn
Festival in the autumn
.—Xinhua |