China Daily Global Weekly

Bali still awaits tourists after reopening

Travel operators blame quarantine rules for keeping visitors away from the resort island

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com

Bali, Indonesia’s most popular holiday destinatio­n, reopened to foreign tourists early this month but the hardhit hotel and travel operators are yet to see any significan­t rise in visitor numbers.

Industry insiders say mandatory quarantine is keeping out the sunseekers that used to flock in their millions to the island before the pandemic prompted border closures two years ago.

Putu Winastra, chairman of the Associatio­n of the Indonesian Tour and Travel Agencies in Bali, fears that things may not improve in the foreseeabl­e future because vaccinated foreign tourists are being put off by the quarantine of at least five days in a designated hotel. The island was reopened to tourism on Feb 4.

Winastra has appealed to the Indonesian authoritie­s to shorten the quarantine period for fully vaccinated tourists who test negative for COVID-19.

He notes that almost all of the 4.3 million residents of Bali are fully vaccinated, reducing the risk of infection in the community.

“Bali’s economy is bleeding. Many Balinese people have sold their assets to survive,” Winastra said.

Indonesia’s plans for Bali illustrate the difficult balancing act that all countries have to deal with as the world enters the third year of the pandemic.

Vaccinatio­n campaigns have encouraged Southeast Asian nations to slowly reopen their borders and try to shore up their travel tourism sectors and the wider economy.

This is especially crucial for Indonesia and the Philippine­s, another nation that rolled out the welcome mat for internatio­nal visitors this month. These two countries have reopened their borders to foreign tourists even though they have relatively high numbers of cases in Southeast Asia.

John Paolo Rivera, associate director of Andrew Tan Center for Tourism at the Asian Institute of Management in Manila, said the costs associated with lockdowns when cases flare up far outweigh the benefits of opening borders to foreign tourists.

“Better distributi­on of vaccines across the globe is also critical,” he said.

On Feb 10, the Philippine­s began allowing fully vaccinated tourists from 157 countries that have visa-free arrangemen­ts with the country. Tourists must present negative COVID-19 test results upon arrival.

Philippine Tourism Secretary Berna Romulo-Puyat said over 7,000 fully vaccinated foreign travelers have since arrived in the country. She said these tourists were from the United States, Canada, Australia, Britain, Japan, and South Korea, according to a report filed by ABS-CBN.

In Indonesia, the country has also reopened the Riau islands to foreign visitors.

Dicky Budiman, an epidemiolo­gist at Griffith University in Australia, said that while reopening borders will entail a health risk, he believes that Bali is capable of mitigating the risk because of the island’s high vaccinatio­n rate.

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