Monday, July 29, 2024

Wilderness hiking and camping now banned in Sichuan (and elsewhere?)

 


This blog describes the camping and hiking trips I made to off-the-beaten track parts of Sichuan and Yunnan from the 1990s to the 2010s. It was an era when it was possible to simply take a bus to a remote town such as Jiulong or Litang and have the freedom to set off on a hike through the forests and mountains, seeking help with food and shelter from locals along the way. While there might have been rules against this, they were seldom if ever enforced.

But according to a 2023 notice I just found on the Sichuan government website, off-the-beaten travel outside of designated formal tourist areas now seems to be forbidden.

The proclamation, entitled "Strengthening the Management of Tourism Activities in Undeveloped and Open Areas" states that tourists (and tour guides) are to "strictly abide by laws and regulations and regulations of relevant management agencies, and not to enter nature reserves, ecological red line areas, water sources, flood rivers, water conservancy projects under construction, state-owned forest farms, forest areas, grassland fire prevention areas and other areas where tourist activities have not been carried out without authorization."

The notice also warns media and social media sites not to promote "wild excursions" and also to delete any content that is posted about travel in "undeveloped areas".

For local residents in wilderness areas, the notice states that they should not promote travel to undeveloped areas nor set up private scenic spots, engage in commercial activities for tourists [including retail and catering for them] or guide people within wilderness areas, unless authorised by tourism authorities. Local people are required to take the initiative to identify and challenge any outsiders they see entering wilderness areas and to "patiently explain and persuade them to return."

Local authorities are required to "update the scope and management subjects of areas where tourists are strictly prohibited from entering, and adopt normal inspections and investigations, set up signs at the entrance of the area, and issue announcements through the media to remind people of the security risks and legal responsibilities that may arise from unauthorized entry, and promptly persuade them to leave. For those who enter in violation of the law, if they do not listen to dissuasion, they shall coordinate the public security organs to take compulsory evacuation measures when necessary."

I can well imagine similar bans being enacted in provinces with wilderness areas such as Yunnan, Qinghai and Gansu.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I think this was always technically always the case, but relatively unenforced. At one point I'd looked up the regulations regarding Chinese nature reserves (自然保护区) and entry was only allowed in exterior areas developed for tourism, while the core areas were supposed to be off limits to all except staff and researchers. Will be sad to see if they do start enforcing this more vigourously though.