Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

BALI WELCOMES FIRST INTERNATIO­NAL FLIGHT IN TWO YEARS AS ISLAND OPENS TO TOURISTS FROM ALL COUNTRIES

- Additional reporting by staff reporter

A Singapore Airlines plane landed in Bali on February 16, the first internatio­nal passenger flight to the Indonesian holiday island in nearly two years

One holidaymak­er on the flight called the reopening a ‘great sign’ for tourism, although all visitors must first quarantine at a hotel for three to seven days

Bali began a tentative reopening to foreign tourists on February 16, with the first internatio­nal passenger flight to the Indonesian holiday island in nearly two years.

The resumption of flights comes as the Southeast Asian archipelag­o loosens quarantine rules even as it battles a surge in Covid-19 cases fuelled by the Omicron variant.

A Singapore Airlines plane carrying 109 internatio­nal travellers and 47 Indonesian­s landed in Bali on February 16, the island’s governor Wayan Koster told a press conference. The foreign visitors must stay in a quarantine bubble at one of 27 designated hotels for three to seven days, depending on the number of vaccine doses received, according to new nationwide rules.

“I hope that in early March, there will be no more quarantine obligation for tourists as long as they comply with health protocol requiremen­ts and show negative test results on departure and arrival,” the governor said.

Arriving at Bali airport, Australian holidaymak­er James said the reopening was a “great sign” for tourism. Swiss national Manuela, a frequent visitor to Bali before the pandemic, said she had been eagerly anticipati­ng the first flight to the “Island of the Gods”.

“Two years not going to Bali is a long time. After my friend wrote me that Bali would open, I immediatel­y looked for the first flight,” she said.

Singapore Airlines said it will operate daily flights between the city state and Bali to meet “good demand”. Other airlines including Australia-based Jetstar Airways could resume flights to the holiday hotspot as early as next month, Bali’s governor added.

“We are aware of the increasing and fluctuatin­g Omicron variant cases, but as long as we are strictly implementi­ng health protocols, we should not be worried,” said Bali Hotel and Restaurant Associatio­n chair Rai Wijaya.

Bali authoritie­s trialled a limited reopening in October for a group of select countries but the response was tepid thanks to strict quarantine requiremen­ts and the absence of direct flights.

Indonesia reported a record number of new coronaviru­s cases on February 15. Daily infections topped 57,000, according to the government’s Covid-19 task force, surpassing the previous peak in July last year, during the country’s Delta wave. The number of deaths attributed to Covid-19, however, is just a fraction of what they were last summer.

Elsewhere in the region, the Philippine­s reopened for internatio­nal tourism last week while Vietnam is planning to welcome back foreign tourists from March 15.

 ?? ?? Denpasar, Bali. Indonesia reported a record number of new coronaviru­s cases on February 15. Photo: EPA
Denpasar, Bali. Indonesia reported a record number of new coronaviru­s cases on February 15. Photo: EPA
 ?? ?? A nearly empty beach in Kuta, Bali. The Indonesian holiday island began a tentative reopening to foreign tourists on February 16. Photo: EPA
A nearly empty beach in Kuta, Bali. The Indonesian holiday island began a tentative reopening to foreign tourists on February 16. Photo: EPA
 ?? ?? Bali has re-opened to foreign tourists and years on February 16. Photo: Xinhua
Bali has re-opened to foreign tourists and years on February 16. Photo: Xinhua
 ?? ?? Travellers walk through the internatio­nal arrivals hall at Ngurah Rai Internatio­nal Airport, Bali. Photo: AFP
Travellers walk through the internatio­nal arrivals hall at Ngurah Rai Internatio­nal Airport, Bali. Photo: AFP

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