Expats who need basic information about Shanghai can now turn to
a free hotline offered by the municipal government.
The Shanghai Call Center, which was officially launched on
Friday, provides both English and Chinese information about tourist
destinations, culture, sports, trade, medical care and other issues
of daily life in Shanghai.
The metropolis leads other big cities in China and sets a good
example, organizers said.
It will also make it easier for expatriates, and Hong Kong,
Macao and Taiwan citizens, to live in Shanghai.
"I used to have to dial 114," a directory service provided by a
Chinese company, said Patrick Campbell-Dunn, who is in Shanghai on
a short-term study program.
He said: "It sometimes takes 5 minutes to get the right
information."
He said he once tried to get information about a school, but the
"114" operator could not understand him. In the end, he had to turn
to a convenience store for assistance.
Mercedes Gonzalez, director of a Mexican university's Shanghai
office, said such services were convenient and necessary.
"The biggest obstacle in my life in Shanghai is communication. I
can't read anything," she said.
"I can speak a little Chinese, but people here are very shy when
answering my questions," she said.
But the center local foreigners can get through by dialling
962288, people outside Shanghai must dial 021962288 and overseas
callers need to dial 8621962288 should be able to provide the right
information, she said.
She was concerned about whether telephone operators would really
be able to understand what she says because many foreigners, like
her, speak English with an accent.
Nnongha Alban, a Nigerian postgraduate at Fudan University, who
was sent to try the number at the launch ceremony on Friday,
relieved her of that worry.
"The service is great and I like it," said the young Nigerian,
who asked about a sports club and was recommended one in the
downtown area.
The hotline will run 24 hours a day and seven days a week and is
backed by a group of 12 operators, all graduates with bachelor
degrees.
Gu Qi, a graduate of Shanghai International Studies University,
now works at the center after two weeks' training.
"The information I provide is from a database that is regularly
updated," she said.
She said that during the trial period she answered five calls
from Britons inquiring about residence certificates.
She anticipates that many questions will be related to
visas.
With roughly 100,000 permanent foreign residents in the city,
Shanghai is taking steps to present a better international
image.
Sponsored by the information office of Shanghai municipality and
the foreign affairs office of Shanghai municipal government, the
call center was set up by the Wenhui-Xinmin United Press Group.
(China Daily May 27, 2006)