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 Saturday, March 27, 2004

Yesterday (2 days ago?) I made the long journey from Portland to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. I departed PDX about 9:45am on Friday morning, flying to SFO.  Thanks to United's much improved wireless access (thanks TMobile) I was able to catch up on quite a bit of work in the Red Carpet lounges in both PDX and SFO.  At about 1pm I boarded the 747-400 in SFO to fly to Shanghai, China.  It has been over three years since I did a flight of this length - over 14 hours.

The impressive Shanghai airport.

We arrived in Shanghai about 6pm local time (did you know that all of China has the same time zone?) - this is where some confusion set in.  The kind flight attendants on the United flight assured me that I wouldn't have to clear customs in China if I was simply transferring to another international flight (turns out I was the only one on this flight doing so!).  So I didn't bother to fill out the immigration and customs paperwork.  The agent that processed my check-in at PDX had been a bit ambiguous about what would happen to my luggage in Shanghai; I think it is unusual for people to connect to China Eastern.

Upon departing the plane, I was pretty worried about my luggage and I had a couple of hours, so I proceeded to baggage claim to see if it showed up there.  Of course it did, so I grabbed it and tried to follow the signs to international transfers.  The agent there insisted that I need to go through customs and check in upstairs at the desk.  I am heading to Beijing after my stay in KL, so I have a Chinese visa in my passport - this made clearing immigration and customs very straightforward.  But what if I didn't have a visa (which would have been the case if I had only been traveling to KL)?  I was able to check in for my flight, but before heading to the gate I had to come up with an airport tax of 90 Yuan RMB.  This seemed much more complicated than it needed to be, and I'm still wondering if there was a way to deal with this without passing through immigration.

Still, I made it to KL without a hitch, arriving at 2:15am local time, and finally arriving at my hotel around 4:00am.  I had managed to sleep for about 6 hours total on my two flights (over a 24 hour period), so I didn't need a ton of sleep.  This was good, as my rest was, well, restless but at least I managed 3 hours of sleep.

View of the KL skyline from my hotel room.

We are in the tropics here, so things are quite warm, and I woke up to a fairly hazy Sunday morning.  Today is a day of rest and, hopefully, some recreation with my colleague Trevor who is stationed here.

Sunday, March 28, 2004 12:35:19 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)
Chris, you *DO* have a multiple entry visa for China, right?
George
Sunday, March 28, 2004 12:36:05 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)
And here I thought Monday AM flights from ATL to PDX were oppressive.
Sunday, March 28, 2004 5:51:38 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00)
George - Regarding multi-entry, the answer is a resounding "no". This is of course adding to my level of frustration. I'm convinced that if I hadn't had a Chinese visa in the first case, they would have had the patience to listen to me in Shanghai and not force me through immigration. So, we are working things out right now to fix it one way or the other. So hopefully I really will be in Beijing on Thursday...
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