More than 2,300 passengers and crew members were stranded when a South Korean district court ordered the ship detained in the port of Jeju on Friday.
Three flights set off from Beijing today to bring back the passengers, according to the microblog of Chinese tour operator HNA Cruise.
Four chartered planes will make two trips each, which will be enough to carry all the passengers and crew, according to a woman who answered the company's emergency hotline. She gave only her surname, Zhao.
The cruise liner had set off from Tianjin, a port city near Beijing, on Wednesday and was scheduled to sail around South Korea islands and ports before returning to Tianjin six days later.
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HNA Cruise said the Jeju court acted upon a request of a Chinese company over legal disputes but did not elaborate. The ship was supposed to depart Jeju on Friday.
South Korea's Yonhap news agency said a Chinese creditor has entrusted an unidentified South Korean company to make the court request.
Officials at Shagang Group and Jeju district court could not be reached for comment.