China warns its citizens against traveling to Sri Lanka after bombings

Visits: 7

China on Tuesday warned its citizens not to travel to Sri Lanka after a series of explosions there on Easter Sunday killed nearly 300 people, including 32 foreigners.

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The travel warning comes as a blow to Sri Lanka’s fast-growing tourism sector, which has already been hit by last year’s political turmoil.

A spate of bombings on churches and hotels in Sri Lanka on Sunday killed 290 people and wounded more than 500 others.

Colombo, the country’s capital, is currently under curfew amid warnings of further attacks and fears of communal violence. There has been no claim of responsibility for the attacks, but the authorities have blamed local militants with links to foreign networks.

On Tuesday, the Chinese embassy warned its citizens in Sri Lanka to stay away “in the near term” from crowded areas and pay attention to safety reminders.

“If Chinese citizens insist on going (to Sri Lanka) after this warning is issued, they will bring enormous security risks to their parties and make it difficult for the embassy to provide effective assistance,” the advisory said in Chinese.

The U.S. State Department on Sunday also issued an advisory that Americans should “exercise increased caution” in Sri Lanka. “Terrorist groups continue plotting possible attacks in Sri Lanka,” said the advisory, which cited tourist locations, markets, hotels, clubs and restaurants among possible targets.

The twin warnings will continue to put pressure on Sri Lanka’s tourism industry, which makes up nearly 5 percent of its economy and is the island state’s third largest and fastest growing source of foreign currency, according to Reuters.

Tourism arrivals reached 2.33 million in 2018 — 10.3 percent higher than a year earlier, and some 420 percent more than in 2009, data from the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority showed.

— CNBC’s Ted Kemp and Reuters contributed to this report.

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