Chinese tourists accused of stealing coloured ‘jewels’ from Ussuri bay in Vladivastok

Chinese visitors to Russian port urged to behave after daily coach loads of visitors from China are accused removing the colourful ‘pebbles’ formed from tonnes of broken glass, writes Alice Shen of theĀ South China Morning Post

Chinese diplomats in Russia have warned tourists visiting the country to behave after complaints that visitors to Vladivostok were stealing rare glass “pebbles ” from one of the city’s beaches.

Around a dozen Chinese tourists have been filmed picking up the colourful objects formed by the remnants of glass bottles at Ussuri Bay and carrying them away.”Some tour agencies have told their clients it’s allowed to take glass away from the beach, which is not true,” China’s consulate-general in Vladivostok said. “We remind Chinese tourists and travel agencies to behave properly.”

“My friends there told me four to five Chinese tourist buses come every day and all the tourists [from those buses] do it,” said Alexander Smolyakov, 34, a driver in Vladivostok who lives around 20km from the beach.

There is a sign at the beach saying: “Taking glass from the beach is strictly forbidden”, but the warning is only written in Russian.

The port city is located in Russia’s far east, near the country’s borders with China and North Korea. It has become a popular tourist destination for Chinese visitors in recent years.

Vladivostok received 330,000 visitors from China in 2015, third only to Moscow and St Petersburg among Russian destinations, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. The number of visitors rose by 85 per cent in the first six months of 2016 compared with the same period the previous year.

Ussuri Bay is covered with sparkling glass stones which were formed from the thousands of glass bottles dumped in the sea during the Soviet era.

Pictures of the colourful “stones” have proved especially popular on social media and is proving a strong draw for Chinese visitors.

 

www.nzherald.co.nz