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Bali to reopen to some foreign tourists from mid-October

Visitors will be required to quarantine for eight days, Luhut said.

Reuters
Jakarta
Mon, October 4, 2021

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Bali to reopen to some foreign tourists from mid-October Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Minister Luhut Panjaitan speaking in Jakarta on Tuesday (30/6). He was thanking Nestle Indonesia for providing food aid to scavengers and protective gear to health workers amid COVID-19. (Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Ministry/Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Ministry)

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span class="highlight" data-qa-component="highlight-text">Indonesia will reopen its tourist island Bali for some international travllers, including those from China, New Zealand, and Japan, among others, from Oct. 14, Coordinating Maritime Affairs and Investment Minister Luhut Pandjaitan told reporters on Monday.

Visitors will be required to quarantine for eight days, Luhut said.

Indonesia has been among the countries worst hit by COVID-19 in Asia, officially recording more than 4 million cases and 142,000 deaths, although public health experts believe the true toll is far higher.

However, daily cases have plummeted from more than 56,000 at the peak of the second wave in mid-July this year to 1,142 cases on Oct. 3, data from the COVID-19 task force showed.

Bali's Ngurah Rai international airport will be open to foreign tourists from that date, with visitors required to quarantine for eight days at their own expense, Luhut told reporters.

The country's reopening and easing of social restrictions is being conducted in stages, he said, because Indonesia "doesn't want the unexpected to happen".

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Health Minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin had previously flagged reopening the popular resort island, saying foreign tourists could return after more than 70 percent of people on Bali had received at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine.

The government has also signaled its willingness to reopen the island to international tourists to help revive Bali's battered economy.

Indonesia, Southeast Asia's biggest economy, exited its first recession in over two decades in the second quarter, though a COVID-19 resurgence and ensuing social restrictions likely weighed on the recovery momentum.

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