Cross-strait charter

Cross-strait charter is located in Eastern China
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NAVAIDs for cross-strait flights between Mainland China and Taiwan, agreed by both sides. [1][2][3][4][5]
On January 29, 2005, China Airlines Flight 581 took off from Taoyuan International Airport and landed at Beijing International Airport.

A cross-strait charter (simplified Chinese: 两岸包机; traditional Chinese: 兩岸包機; pinyin: liǎng'àn bāojī) is a charter flight between Taiwan and mainland China, across the Taiwan Strait. After the Chinese Civil War, no direct flights were allowed between Taiwan and mainland China; this remained the case until 2003. Passengers had to transfer in a third city, such as Hong Kong, to complete their trip.

For the years 2003 and 2005, the scheme was restricted for the Chinese New Year period, so it was then called the Lunar New Year cross-strait charter (simplified Chinese: 两岸春节包机; traditional Chinese: 兩岸春節包機; pinyin: liǎng'àn chūnjié bāojī) in Taiwan, and the charter for Taiwan residents (simplified Chinese: 台湾居民包机; traditional Chinese: 臺灣居民包機; pinyin: táiwān jūmín bāojī) in mainland China. For these years, the scheme was restricted for Taiwanese businessmen and their family members (excluding students and tourists) who are in mainland China to travel to and from Taiwan.

In 2006, the service was opened to all residents of Taiwan for the first time. From the Mid-Autumn Festival on 2006, the valid period of the agreement was expanded to four main Chinese festivals: Qingming Festival, Dragon Boat Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival, and the original Chinese New Year.

In July 2008, charter flights expanded to weekends. Flight restrictions on nationalities were removed and mainland China residents as well as foreign citizens were able to take the flights.

In November 2008, flights became daily instead only for the weekends. 108 weekly flights were established and the planes no longer had to travel through Hong Kong airspace, cutting travel times by two thirds in some cases such as flying from Taipei to Shanghai.

In April 2009, a new agreement was reached to allow cross-strait flights to become regularly scheduled instead of chartered. The cap on the flights was also raised to 270 flights per week, effective 31 August 2009.[6] On 22 May 2010, another 100 additional weekly flights were permitted to be operated effective 14 June 2010, and Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport and Shijiazhuang Airport were added to the list of allowed destinations.[7][8]

  1. ^ "《海峡两岸空运协议》(全文)". 新华社. 中华人民共和国中央人民政府. 2008-11-05.
  2. ^ 陳國雄 (2008-10-08). "新航線出賣國防". 自由评论. 自由时报.
  3. ^ "背景:海峡两岸直航示意图". 中国新闻网. 2008-12-18.
  4. ^ "新航路啟用 台灣.廣州航管首度對話(影音)". 2011-08-02.
  5. ^ "两岸直达航路通航" (PDF). 飛航服務總臺.
  6. ^ "Taiwan,China To Raise Direct Flights To 270/Wk-Source". Archived from the original on April 30, 2009.
  7. ^ "Chinese carriers expected to operate more cross-straits flights".
  8. ^ "Shanghai most popular destination for cross-s".

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