Bali reopens to international tourists, but with no flights
Indonesia's holiday island of Bali reopened to foreign
tourists after 18 months of pandemic hiatus on Thursday, but the island is
lacking one crucial ingredient: international flights.
Tourism-reliant Bali is scheduled to reopen on Thursday and
though its Ngurah Rai international airport has carried out simulations
preparing for tourists to return, it is not expecting much to happen soon.
"So far there is no schedule," said Taufan
Yudhistira, a spokesman for the airport.
Indonesia's tight immigration measures during the pandemic
have devastated the island, with widespread closures of hotels, shops and
businesses.
The government is eager to revive Bali's beleaguered tourism
industry in response to a sharp fall in new coronavirus cases since July, when
Indonesia was Asia's COVID-19 epicenter.
But details about the reopening, such as visa requirements
and which countries they apply to, have so far been patchy.
Indonesia only confirmed the 19 eligible countries in a
statement late on Wednesday, which include China, India, Japan, South Korea and
New Zealand, and several countries from Western Europe and the Arabian Gulf.
The move follows Thailand's calibrated reopening that began
in July with much fanfare, with the islands of Samui and Phuket welcoming
vaccinated tourists from multiple countries, with hundreds on the opening days.
Vietnam plans to welcome foreigners to its Phu Quoc island
next month. But some Indonesian tourism industry representatives say Bali's
reopening plan not matched by demand. I Putu Astawa from the Bali tourism
agency said hotel reservations were few.
"Not yet because the timing is so sudden," he
said, when asked about a spike in bookings. "They need time to take care
of visas and flights."
As well as requiring Bali visitors to be vaccinated against
COVID-19, Indonesia has stipulated they must spend their first five days in
quarantine, a measure rival tourism markets are phasing out.
"We are ready to accept tourists who visit Bali, but
certainly it does not mean all the guests suddenly visit Bali," said Ida
Bagus Purwa Sidemen, executive director of the island's hotel and restaurant
association.
"At the earliest, by the end of the year, we can
evaluate whether the situation has improved."
In a video released on the president secretariat’s YouTube
channel to mark the reopening on Thursday, Bali Governor I Wayan Koster said
reviving tourism was essential for the island.
"It is very much in our interest for tourism to recover
because 54% of Bali's economy relies on tourism sector," he said.
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