Hanwha Galleria, a local duty-free operator, will remove its business from a local airport amid a sharp decrease in the number of Chinese tourists following a diplomatic row over the deployment of a US missile defense system here, industry sources said Monday.
The duty-free operator has recently delivered its intention to the Korea Airports, the country's airport operator, to return its duty-free business license at Jeju Airport, which is valid until April 2019, and received written consent from the airport operator, according to the sources.
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This file photo taken on April 1, 2016, shows Hanwha Galleria Co.'s duty-free store in Seoul crowded with Chinese tourists. (Yonhap) |
Following due procedures, the business could be suspended within this year at the earliest, they said.
Hanwha Galleria, which won the bid to run the duty-free store in 2014, has been suffering from the drop in the number of tourists after the Beijing government banned the country's travel agencies from selling Korea-bound package tours since mid-March in an apparent retaliation over the THAAD deployment. The Chinese accounted for 46.7 percent of all tourists coming to South Korea last year.
In the April-May period, the duty-free operator's monthly sales hovered below the 2 billion-won ($1.74 million) mark.
Hanwha Galleria's request to cut the rent, which is around 25 billion won a year, is known to have been rejected by the airport operator. (Yonhap)