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Chinese travelers trickle back to a Taiwanese island, mere miles from the mainland

Remnants of military conflict surround Zhang Zhong Jie's cafe.

The coffee shop sits within an abandoned military fortification, its entrance surrounded by rusting tanks.

It's a scene the citizens of Taiwan's remote Kinmen Island know well. All that separates the cafe from mainland China are 6 miles of choppy water and a row of anti-invasion spikes along the beach.

Despite the long-standing tensions between Taiwan and China, tourists from the mainland were the cafe's main source of revenue since it opened in 2018.

"In the beginning, we had regular group tourists — perhaps at least two or three busloads from travel agencies every day," Zhang said.

But five years on, things look very different.

Although China claims sovereignty over Taiwan, Chinese tourists were prevented from visiting Taiwan for years.

In August 2019, Beijing blocked individual travelers from visiting Taiwan, citing poor cross-strait relations. In 2020, tour groups were banned from visiting because of Covid-19 pandemic.

For many on Kinmen, the lack of Chinese visitors has been devastating.

"We haven't had mainland tourists for years," Zhang said. "The tourism industry in Kinmen has long been heavily reliant on Chinese tourists, so the impact is definitely significant."

In the mid-20th century, Kinmen was on the front line of China's conflict with Taiwan.

Soldiers trained on its beaches, towns were filled with anti-Communist propaganda, and bomb shelters were tucked away in gardens.

But as the military presence in Kinmen subsided, the island pivoted toward tourism.

Residents didn't shy from the island's conflict-ridden past. Like Zhang, many opened cafes in former military fortifications, sold "war rations" in restaurants or made specialty "bomb knives" out of old

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