Cebu Pacific cancels launch of Cebu-Taiwan flights amid row

Cebu Pacific said Wednesday, May 29, 2013, it had canceled the planned launch of a new Taiwan route because of tensions over a Taiwanese fishermen being killed by the Filipino coastguard. AFP FILE PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines—One of the Philippines’ biggest airlines said Wednesday it had canceled the planned launch of a new Taiwan route because of tensions over a Taiwanese fishermen being killed by the Filipino coastguard.

Cebu Pacific had been scheduled to begin flights between Cebu, the Philippines’ second-biggest city, and Taiwan’s capital, Taipei, in July but this week indefinitely suspended the route, an airline spokeswoman told AFP.

“It would be a bit difficult to start it with the current tension… some passengers (had) already requested refunds or travel changes,” spokeswoman Candice Iyog told AFP.

However, she said an existing route between Manila and Taipei would be kept.

Coastguard officers shot dead a 65-year-old Taiwanese man on May 9 who they said was aboard a boat fishing illegally in Philippine waters.

Taiwan’s government, which said the incident took place in its exclusive economic zone, reacted with fury, issuing a “red alert” against traveling to the Philippines and imposing economic sanctions.

The zones claimed by the two sides overlap in some areas.

It rejected repeated apologies from the Philippine government, and demanded that criminal charges be brought against those responsible for the killing.

Philippine tourism department spokesman Benito Bengzon said the travel alert had started to have an impact, and a strategy was being put into place to try and make up for the fall from Taiwan by attracting tourists from other markets.

Budget carrier Zest Airlines said last week it had canceled flights between Taiwan and Kalibo, a gateway to the popular beach resort of Boracay.

Taiwan has also frozen the hiring of overseas Filipino workers, and an invitation for the Philippine national basketball team to play in a regional tournament in Taipei was rescinded.

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