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Nepal bans Chinese digital wallets
by Staff Writers
Kathmandu (AFP) May 21, 2019

Nepal said Tuesday it has banned popular Chinese digital wallets Alipay and WeChat to prevent the loss of foreign currency earnings from tens of thousands of Chinese tourists.

Over 150,000 Chinese holidaymakers visited Nepal last year, many using digital wallets to pay in hotels, restaurants and shops in tourist areas -- especially in Chinese-run businesses.

Laxmi Prapanna Niroula, a spokesman for the country's central bank which announced the ban on Monday, said that Nepal was losing out since the actual transactions took place in China.

"We have enforced a ban on Alipay and WeChat Pay because the country is losing foreign currency earnings through its usage. Action will be taken if anyone is found using the platforms," Niroula told AFP.

Niroula said there was no information available on the volume of transactions concerned.

Alipay, started by e-commerce giant Alibaba and owned by its affiliate Ant Financial, and WeChat Pay, built into Tencent's popular messaging service, have hundreds of millions of users between them and are China's dominant payment platforms.

"Chinese tourists often ask for digital payment options. With the ban, people are bound to lose business," said Sushil Koirala, who runs a tea shop in Thamel, Kathmandu's main tourist area.

A street in Thamel has even earned the name Chinatown because of the high number of Chinese-run hotels and restaurants.

Tourism is a major revenue-earner for impoverished Nepal, home to eight of the world's 14 peaks over 8,000 metres (26,000 feet).

Tourism contributed 7.8 percent to the Himalayan nation's economy in 2017, creating over a million jobs, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council.

Last year it welcomed more than a million visitors for the first time.

pm/stu/amu

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TRADE WARS
China's economy shows further weakness as retail sales struggle
Beijing (AFP) May 15, 2019
China's economy showed further signs of weakness in April as the slowest growth in retail sales for 16 years highlighted the task leaders have in ramping up domestic demand at the same time as fighting a painful trade war with the US. Authorities have for years been attempting to transition the world's number two economy from being reliant on state investment and exports to a more stable one driven by China's huge army of consumers, with the tariffs stand-off reinforcing the need for such a change. ... read more

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