Ireland named top destination for Chinese travellers

WEEKS AFTER being selected as the top destination for 2011 by users of the highly respected Frommer’s

WEEKS AFTER being selected as the top destination for 2011 by users of the highly respected Frommer’s.com website, Ireland has again been voted as the most desirable place to visit by holidaymakers.

The country was rated as the Most Popular Destination of 2010 at a high-profile travel awards ceremony in Shanghai, China, yesterday. The Special Trip: World Travel Awards is organised by the Oriental Morning Post, a daily newspaper with about 400,000 readers. The award winners are voted by the paper's readers as well as travel specialists from around China.

Such news will be welcomed by the tourism industry which has been badly affected by a sharp decline in visitors to the country. According to an end-of-year review by the Irish Tourist Industry Confederation published a week ago, the number of visitors here fell to a 12-year low in 2010.

The award comes after a concerted campaign by Tourism Ireland to boost awareness of the island of Ireland as a major holiday destination in the region.

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Accepting the award, Susan Li of Tourism Ireland said she was confident the honour would further enhance the reputation of the country and help to attract more visitors from China.

This is just one of a number of awards to be bestowed on Ireland by Chinese media. A recent survey carried out by Life Style, a Beijing newspaper with a circulation of about 300,000, rated the country as the Destination with the Most Potential for 2011.

Separately, Tourism Ireland recently picked up an award for the Most Creative Destination by national newspaper Global Timesat the Most Popular Outbound Destinations Awards 2010 in Beijing.

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor is a former Irish Times business journalist