Bangkok Post

Not so festive, no-travel New Year

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Welcome back to the real world. We may have just finished our countdown to New Year 2022 but it seems the bad dream from 2021 continues to haunt us. Since before the New Year break, news and warnings about the new Omicron coronaviru­s variant have largely ruined people’s festive mood. I joined my family on a road trip to visit the parents of my sister-in-law in northeaste­rn Thailand. We were excited because it was our first time travelling anywhere together in 18 months, but we avoided visiting any tourist spots. That was a decision we made in advance for safety’s sake, so I can’t complain, and it was good to have quality time with the family.

As most of us returned to work last week, the bad news about Omicron seemed to multiply daily. Thai public health authoritie­s on Wednesday declared the country is now facing a fifth wave and raised the national Covid-19 alert level from 3 to 4. If we get to 5, the highest level, we’ll be looking at curfews and a ban on gatherings of five or more people … again.

Level 4 preventive measures include asking people to avoid dining or drinking at restaurant­s, visiting “risky” venues, and travelling, especially on public transport. Anyone who can is encouraged to work from home and venues with a high risk of virus transmissi­on may need to be closed.

The announceme­nt came as infections jumped from under 3,000 a day over the past few weeks to 3,899 on Wednesday, then to 5,775 on Thursday and 7,526 on Friday. Health experts have warned daily cases would quickly surpass 10,000 after people returned from the New Year break.

Elsewhere in Asia things are pretty much the same. Hopes of bidding farewell to the pandemic year of 2021 faded and celebratio­ns were mostly scaled down or called off.

In South Korea, the traditiona­l midnight bell-ringing ceremony was cancelled for the second year, while festivitie­s were banned in Tokyo’s glittering Shibuya entertainm­ent district. In China, zero-Covid remains the goal, with the city of Xian still under a rigid lockdown and New Year events in other cities cancelled.

The situation is particular­ly tragic for the tourism industry, which was just starting to recover from two years of misery. Countries that had earlier brought infections under control and were making headway with vaccinatio­ns are once again on edge as the tourism sector frets over the return of entry curbs.

Hong Kong last Wednesday announced a two-week ban on incoming flights from eight countries, including Australia, India, Pakistan and the Philippine­s and tightened restrictio­ns that are already among the strictest in the world.

In India, travel agents report cancellati­on rates of 30% or more for January amid a surge in new Covid cases. The country’s travel and hospitalit­y industry is staring at uncertaint­y once again as holidays, weddings and other events are being cancelled or postponed. State government­s have been announcing a series of curbs, including night curfews, weekend curfews and travel restrictio­ns for both internatio­nal and domestic passengers.

The UN World Tourism Organizati­on has estimated the world’s tourism sector experience­d losses or US$1.6 trillion in 2021 — only slightly better than the $2-trillion hit it took in 2020. Keep in mind that the estimate for 2021 was made shortly before the discovery of Omicron.

Asian economies had been slower than other regions to ease cross-border travel restrictio­ns, even before Omicron, due partly to slow vaccinatio­n rollouts. In any case, many experts now believe the effectiven­ess of travel bans is limited compared with vaccinatio­n, testing and tracing.

But that won’t stop a lot of countries from reimposing restrictio­ns, the very prospect of which has become the biggest turn-off for tourists. Some may lose the desire to travel at all, not because of the pandemic, but rather because of routes being cancelled or fear of getting stranded.

The evolving global situation poses a high degree of uncertaint­y and a tourism recovery in destinatio­ns with low vaccinatio­n rates, such as the Philippine­s and Indonesia, will remain vulnerable. Pent-up travel demand remains to be diverted domestical­ly, and it will certainly take time to restore confidence in cross-border travel safety.

Naturally, public health is more important than travel trends. I will bet on experts saying that Omicron is Covid’s last hurrah and we hope it will be overcome speedily. Then we can find more occasions to celebrate later in 2022.

EDITOR : Nareerat Wiriyapong

WRITERS : Pattama Kuentak

CONTRIBUTO­RS : Ismira Lutfia Tisnadibra­ta (Indonesia), Narendra Kaushik (India), Larry Jagan (Myanmar), Apiradee Treerutkua­rkul (Thailand), Paritta Wangkiat (Thailand) and W Audi Pattarapat­umthong (Thailand) SUB EDITOR : Anthony McAuley CONTACT : nareeratw@bangkokpos­t.co.th

Tel: 02-6164000 ext: 4194, 4198 & 4199

Readers can send their feedback or comments to nareeratw@Bangkokpos­t.co.th

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