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Jakarta Post

Idul Fitri prayers, festivities return as COVID-19 curbs ease

With less than a week left before Idul Fitri, toll roads, train stations, bus terminals and seaports are brimming with people excited about the yearly homecoming journey -- locally known as "mudik". 

Agencies
Jakarta
Fri, April 29, 2022

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Idul Fitri prayers, festivities return as COVID-19 curbs ease A general view of a traffic jam at a toll booth of a highway as Indonesian Muslims return to their hometowns to celebrate Idul Fitri, known locally as 'Mudik', in Karawang Regency (Reuters/Yuddy Cahya Budiman)

M

illions of Indonesians were travelling to their hometowns on Thursday in an annual exodus from Jakarta and other major cities before the Idul Fitri holidays, a tradition that has been stalled for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

With less than a week left before Idul Fitri, toll roads, train stations, bus terminals and seaports are brimming with people excited about the yearly homecoming journey -- locally known as "mudik". 

Transportation Ministry has predicted that 85 million people will travel for Idul Fitri this year as pandemic restrictions ease. 

Around 14 million will depart from the Jakarta metropolitan area alone, braving hours of traffic to celebrate the end of Ramadan with their families. 

"I am so happy that I can come home and meet my family in my village, I haven't been able to go home before because of the pandemic," said Ika Siti Mariamah, who made the 260-kilometre (160 miles) bus journey from Jakarta to her hometown in West Java with her husband and child. 

Gridlock on the way to the main seaport that connects the islands of Java and Sumatra stretched for more than three kilometres on Thursday. 

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"I feel so happy that I can return home safely and comfortably, this is the first time I have gone home" since the pandemic, said Husni Rifandi, another traveller.

 Transport boom

The enthusiasm for mudik has revitalised Indonesia's battered transportation industry, which came to a standstill during the worst days of the pandemic. 

"We very much welcome the government's decision to allow people to travel for mudik so autobus companies across the country can recover," Lutpi Likardi, who works at a bus company in Jakarta, told AFP

Indonesia has been hammered by the pandemic, suffering more than six million infections and 156,000 deaths. 

The government barred people from partaking in the annual holiday exodus and applied tight travel curbs to prevent the virus from spreading to rural areas. 

But despite the restrictions, millions still exited the big cities to celebrate Idul Fitri with their families last year -- although the numbers were far lower than normal. 

This year, the government has used mudik to encourage Indonesians to take a COVID-19 booster shot, allowing those who have received a third jab to travel without taking a coronavirus test. 

Double-vaccinated travellers are required to present a negative rapid antigen test while those who have only received the first dose or are unvaccinated must take a PCR test no more than 72 hours before departure. 

Around 80 percent of Indonesia's 208 million target population have received their second vaccine dose, with 36 million getting a booster shot.

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