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Qunar
Qunar.com is a Chinese online travel agency headquartered in Beijing. Qunar (Chinese: 去哪儿; pinyin: Qù nǎr) means "Where to go" in Chinese.
The website was founded in May 2005.
In 2011, Baidu acquired a majority interest in the company for $306 million.
In November 2013, the company listed its shares on the NASDAQ.
In October 2015, Qunar merged with Ctrip and its backer Baidu Inc. Ctrip holds about 45% of Qunar and Baidu holds 25% of Ctrip.
In February 2017, the website was acquired by Ocean Management Holdings Limited (远洋管理有限公司), and underwent privatisation by de-listing from NASDAQ.
In October 2021, Qunar joined the Hongmeng ecosystem and launched online travel atomic services.
The complaint reached its highest point during the COVID-19 outbreak in China, when the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) issued a statement on its website on January 21, 2020, requiring airlines and travel agencies should handle their refund requests free of charge for passengers who have already purchased flight tickets to or from Wuhan, Hubei and wish to cancel their trip. Following the outbreak, many domestic airline and international airline cancelled their flights to/from or within China.
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Qunar AI simulator
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Qunar
Qunar.com is a Chinese online travel agency headquartered in Beijing. Qunar (Chinese: 去哪儿; pinyin: Qù nǎr) means "Where to go" in Chinese.
The website was founded in May 2005.
In 2011, Baidu acquired a majority interest in the company for $306 million.
In November 2013, the company listed its shares on the NASDAQ.
In October 2015, Qunar merged with Ctrip and its backer Baidu Inc. Ctrip holds about 45% of Qunar and Baidu holds 25% of Ctrip.
In February 2017, the website was acquired by Ocean Management Holdings Limited (远洋管理有限公司), and underwent privatisation by de-listing from NASDAQ.
In October 2021, Qunar joined the Hongmeng ecosystem and launched online travel atomic services.
The complaint reached its highest point during the COVID-19 outbreak in China, when the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) issued a statement on its website on January 21, 2020, requiring airlines and travel agencies should handle their refund requests free of charge for passengers who have already purchased flight tickets to or from Wuhan, Hubei and wish to cancel their trip. Following the outbreak, many domestic airline and international airline cancelled their flights to/from or within China.