<p>Hundreds of millions in China hustled to enjoy their first major national holiday since the country beat its coronavirus outbreak, filling airports and train stations on Thursday.</p>.<p>The Golden Week holiday marks the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949 and sees an astonishing annual movement of people trying to get home or take holidays.</p>.<p>But this year has added significance, with the crowds filling the concourses pointing to a country rebounding from the outbreak and parading the freedom to travel as a contrast to the rolling lockdowns hitting much of the world.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-india-world-bengaluru-karnataka-mumbai-maharashtra-chennai-tamil-nadu-kolkata-west-bengal-delhi-uttar-pradesh-kerala-gujarat-deaths-recoveries-Covid-19-vaccine-health-ministry-895538.html" target="_blank">For latest updates and live news on coronavirus, click here</a> </strong></p>.<p>"Normally, we would take a family holiday abroad during the Golden Week, but this year we opted for a staycation instead," said Niu Honglin from Shanghai.</p>.<p>Niu booked rooms in a boutique hotel near Shanghai Disneyland but quickly encountered the problem of millions of extra tourists hunting fun at home.</p>.<p>"My daughter had to wait in line for nearly three hours to get on a ride," she said.</p>.<p>Domestic travel has sprung back to life and given the economy a boost after the virus shuttered businesses and scared away tourists following its emergence in Wuhan late last year.</p>.<p>"The Chinese economy has shown strong resilience," Premier Li Keqiang told parliament on Wednesday.</p>.<p>"We will nurture new drivers of growth" he vowed, hailing the "rejuvenation of the Chinese nation".</p>.<p>Wuhan in central China is back in business too, with visitors thronging to the Yellow Crane Tower -- a Taoist shrine -- according to the country's biggest travel agency Ctrip.</p>.<p>More than 600 million trips will be taken during the holiday, down 20 percent from a year ago, Ctrip estimated, but they will still force the state railway to lay on an 1,000 extra trains a day.</p>.<p>Around 108 million passengers will take trains during the eight-day holidays -- around 13.5 million a day.</p>.<p>They are likely to bring much-needed spending to far-flung parts of China -- last year, travellers spent $9.5 billion during the Golden Week.</p>.<p>Many will take luxury holidays at home, travel operator Quanar said, amid global travel restrictions.</p>.<p>But the absence of their tourist dollars this year will leave regional nations -- from Thailand to Cambodia -- wincing from the economic pain caused by the prolonged closure of borders.</p>.<p>At Beijing's Capital Airport -- whose check-in rows and aisles were empty in February -- thousands of passengers queued up with their luggage and children in tow.</p>.<p>Life in the Chinese capital has gradually returned to normal after ghostly scenes of empty roads in January and February, and a second virus outbreak in June.</p>.<p>The once eerily empty streets in the city's financial district are packed, previously deserted malls are full of shoppers and ice rinks have filled with children learning to skate again.</p>.<p>Chinese retail sales edged back to growth in August for the first time since the pandemic struck, signalling a rebound for the world's second-largest economy.</p>
<p>Hundreds of millions in China hustled to enjoy their first major national holiday since the country beat its coronavirus outbreak, filling airports and train stations on Thursday.</p>.<p>The Golden Week holiday marks the founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949 and sees an astonishing annual movement of people trying to get home or take holidays.</p>.<p>But this year has added significance, with the crowds filling the concourses pointing to a country rebounding from the outbreak and parading the freedom to travel as a contrast to the rolling lockdowns hitting much of the world.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/coronavirus-news-live-updates-india-world-bengaluru-karnataka-mumbai-maharashtra-chennai-tamil-nadu-kolkata-west-bengal-delhi-uttar-pradesh-kerala-gujarat-deaths-recoveries-Covid-19-vaccine-health-ministry-895538.html" target="_blank">For latest updates and live news on coronavirus, click here</a> </strong></p>.<p>"Normally, we would take a family holiday abroad during the Golden Week, but this year we opted for a staycation instead," said Niu Honglin from Shanghai.</p>.<p>Niu booked rooms in a boutique hotel near Shanghai Disneyland but quickly encountered the problem of millions of extra tourists hunting fun at home.</p>.<p>"My daughter had to wait in line for nearly three hours to get on a ride," she said.</p>.<p>Domestic travel has sprung back to life and given the economy a boost after the virus shuttered businesses and scared away tourists following its emergence in Wuhan late last year.</p>.<p>"The Chinese economy has shown strong resilience," Premier Li Keqiang told parliament on Wednesday.</p>.<p>"We will nurture new drivers of growth" he vowed, hailing the "rejuvenation of the Chinese nation".</p>.<p>Wuhan in central China is back in business too, with visitors thronging to the Yellow Crane Tower -- a Taoist shrine -- according to the country's biggest travel agency Ctrip.</p>.<p>More than 600 million trips will be taken during the holiday, down 20 percent from a year ago, Ctrip estimated, but they will still force the state railway to lay on an 1,000 extra trains a day.</p>.<p>Around 108 million passengers will take trains during the eight-day holidays -- around 13.5 million a day.</p>.<p>They are likely to bring much-needed spending to far-flung parts of China -- last year, travellers spent $9.5 billion during the Golden Week.</p>.<p>Many will take luxury holidays at home, travel operator Quanar said, amid global travel restrictions.</p>.<p>But the absence of their tourist dollars this year will leave regional nations -- from Thailand to Cambodia -- wincing from the economic pain caused by the prolonged closure of borders.</p>.<p>At Beijing's Capital Airport -- whose check-in rows and aisles were empty in February -- thousands of passengers queued up with their luggage and children in tow.</p>.<p>Life in the Chinese capital has gradually returned to normal after ghostly scenes of empty roads in January and February, and a second virus outbreak in June.</p>.<p>The once eerily empty streets in the city's financial district are packed, previously deserted malls are full of shoppers and ice rinks have filled with children learning to skate again.</p>.<p>Chinese retail sales edged back to growth in August for the first time since the pandemic struck, signalling a rebound for the world's second-largest economy.</p>