Eight dead, including children, in China SUV crash

Police are seen outside the West Kowloon court ahead of the verdicts in media tycoon Jimmy Lai's national security trial in Hong Kong on December 15, 2025.(AFP)
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Updated 24 December 2025
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Eight dead, including children, in China SUV crash

BEJING: Eight people including several children were killed when a kindergarten director lost control of an SUV and plunged into a pond in southeast China, state media reported Wednesday.
The incident occurred Tuesday afternoon in Pengze county, a rural area 480 kilometers (300 miles) west of Shanghai dotted with small bodies of water and interlacing streams.
The crash took place on a downhill section of road likely made slippery by recent rainfall, according to New Security, a publication under the state-run People’s Daily Press.
The seven-seat SUV was typically used to transport children attending a private kindergarten in the area, the report said.
“Several children from the kindergarten were in the vehicle at the time of the accident,” it said, citing local officials.
A previous statement published overnight by county security authorities confirmed that eight people had died including the driver, identified as a 49-year-old woman surnamed Luo.
The statement gave no information on the other victims but said an investigation was ongoing.
One local villager said that his friend’s four-year-old child was among the victims, according to the New Security report.


Philippines seeks to regain Chinese visitors as arrivals lag behind regional rivals

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Philippines seeks to regain Chinese visitors as arrivals lag behind regional rivals

  • 262,000 Chinese tourists visited Philippines in 2025, compared to 1.7m in 2019
  • Vietnam is top destination for Chinese travelers, with about 4.8m visitors this year

MANILLA: The Philippines is trailing behind other countries in Southeast Asia in winning back Chinese tourists, with arrivals well below a quarter of pre-pandemic levels so far this year, latest data showed.

Known for its white sandy beaches, famous diving spots and diverse culture, the Philippines was welcoming an increasing number of Chinese tourists in the period before the pandemic, with the number peaking at over 1.7 million in 2019, when it was the second-largest source market after South Korea. 

But the post-pandemic rebound has been slow, with China ranking sixth among international arrivals and the number of Chinese visitors reaching only 262,000 as of Dec. 20, according to data from the Philippine Department of Tourism.

“China remains one of the country’s largest and most important source markets,” the tourism department said earlier this week.

Chinese arrivals this year are equivalent to only around 15 percent of the numbers in 2019 and there is stiff competition with regional rivals like Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia each welcoming at least 1 million tourists from China in 2025.

Vietnam has become Chinese travelers’ top travel destination in Southeast Asia with around 4.8 million visitors so far this year, followed by Thailand, which has recorded about 4.36 million.

China is Singapore’s top source market, with nearly 3 million visitors as of November.

To attract more visitors from China, the Philippines reintroduced electronic visas for Chinese travelers in November, after suspending the system for two years.

“The eVisa resumption is a critical step forward and a clear signal that the Philippines is open, ready, and eager to welcome our Chinese friends,” said Ireneo Reyes, the tourism attache to China.

“While the timing meant that its full benefits could not be felt within the peak booking periods of 2025, we expect a more visible impact beginning the first quarter of 2026.” 

The Philippine tourism department said that “recovery has also been constrained by reduced flight capacity, with China-Philippines routes operating at only about 45 percent of pre-pandemic levels,” adding that officials were working closely with relevant stakeholders to “rebuild connectivity and confidence.”

Tourism is an important sector in the Philippine economy, according to a report by the ASEAN+3 Macroeconomic Research Office, accounting for about 13.2 percent of the country’s gross domestic product last year and making up around 13.8 percent of its labor force.