She said that everyone was queueing up for tax refunds, but when a group of Chinese tourists came, the queue disintegrated into a mob.
The subtitles read: "I don't understand. There were many people from other countries queuing here... Then the Chinese tour (sic) came here and it became like this."
She filmed the tourists pushing and shoving even as a male companion tried to calm her down.
Chinese tourists have been the bane of many tourism spots for their bad behaviour.
A Thai temple in Chiang Rai recently built separate toilets for non-Chinese tourists after complaints that Chinese tourists behaved inconsiderately.
Residents of remote Palau also voiced their dissatisfaction after Chinese tourists descended on their Micronesian island. They say that the tourists were boisterous, and harmed the corals and marine life.
Chinese travellers represented almost 62 per cent of all visitors to Palau in February this year - up from 16 per cent in January 2014.
There are also frequent cases of Chinese travellers accidentally opening the emergency exits on planes, most recently in Xinjiang on Monday.
The Chinese government has been trying to educate its citizens who go abroad, and in 2013 it published a manual for Chinese tourists that lay out the do's and don'ts when travelling overseas.