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'I need to protect my family': Jakartans nix homecoming trips following COVID-19 'mudik' ban

The SAR-CoV-2 outbreak has forced many living in Jakarta to cancel their plans to celebrate Idul Fitri in their hometowns, even if they already have their ticket in their hands.

Moch. Fiqih Prawira Adjie (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Thu, April 23, 2020

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 'I need to protect my family': Jakartans nix homecoming trips following COVID-19 'mudik' ban A passenger sits inside a Gajayana train traveling to Malang, East Java, at Kota Baru Station in Jakarta. State-owned railway company PT KAI has suspended operations of the route until April 30 to comply with the government's instruction to limit travel to slow the spread of COVID-19. (JP/Aman Rochman )

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or many Indonesians, the Idul Fitri mudik (exodus) is an important tradition that they must prepare for months ahead of Ramadhan, with train and bus tickets in high demand.

But the SAR-CoV-2 outbreak has forced many living in Jakarta – a city thousands have migrated to from around the country in search of work – to cancel their plans to celebrate Idul Fitri in their hometowns, even if they already have their ticket in their hands.

One of them is Anggit Rizki, a 25-year-old worker living in West Jakarta, who in previous years had always returned to his hometown of Malang, East Java, to celebrate Idul Fitri with his family.

“I have never celebrated Idul Fitri in Jakarta because I don’t know what to do here,” he told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.

Anggit initially still intended to go on mudik, even though he was aware of the central government's advice against it. He had even prepared masks and hand sanitizer for his trip and planned to follow the quarantine protocol in Malang once he arrived.

However, he changed his mind after President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo announced a ban on the Idul Fitri mudik on Tuesday and decided to request a refund for the train ticket he bought in February, even though it would mean spending the holiday alone.

“Because of the COVID-19 outbreak, I decided not to go on mudik this year,” he said.

Naila Fauzia Mastutie, a 31-year-old civil servant living in East Jakarta, also decided to cancel her ticket to her hometown in Tulungagung regency, East Java, which she bought at the beginning of the year.

“I realized that it’s not good enough to protect myself, I need to protect my family and other residents in my hometown too,” she told the Post on Tuesday.

Read also: Coronavirus outbreak may end in June with 'mudik' ban: IDI

Millions of people return to their hometowns every year – often traveling from urban centers to the countryside – to celebrate Idul Fitri, with about 20 million leaving Greater Jakarta alone every year during the Islamic holiday.

With Jakarta the country’s epicenter of the virus outbreak, the huge number of expected travelers has raised concerns about mass contagion, with public health experts warning that mudik could cause the respiratory illness to spread rapidly across Java.

The severity of the threat finally convinced Jokowi to ban the Idul Fitri mudik altogether, weeks after his administration had maintained its previous policy of merely advising the public against it.

Jokowi announced the ban after reading a Transportation Ministry survey that found that 24 percent of the country's 270 million people still planned to travel to their hometowns and that 7 percent had already left.

For civil servants and their families, meanwhile, mudik was prohibited far earlier, with Administrative and Bureaucratic Reform Minister Tjahjo Kumolo saying that they could not travel to their hometowns from April 6 until the country “is free of COVID-19”.

As of Wednesday, Indonesia had recorded 7,418 confirmed cases of COVID-19 with 635 deaths. Jakarta alone had reported 3,383 cases and 301 deaths, nearly half the country’s cases.

Read also: COVID-19: Jakarta extends PSBB through Ramadan

Acknowledging the danger the virus posed, Audy, a 47-year-old private employee living in North Jakarta, decided to cancel his Idul Fitri plans and expressed hope many others would do the same.

“I hope other citizens also comply [with the government's ban],” he told the Post on Wednesday.

Coordinating Maritime and Investment Minister Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, who is also the acting transportation minister, said the ban would begin on Friday with travel restrictions to be imposed in COVID-19 red zones that could be sanctioned starting May 7.

Road use, however, will not be completely blocked, as public transportation services across Greater Jakarta will continue to operate to service those who still need to commute to work, including health workers and hospital staff.

Transportation Ministry spokesperson Adita Irawati said on Wednesday that the ministry was preparing a regulation on the mudik ban that would include the sanctions that would be imposed. Transportation of aid and other emergency services will be exempted from the regulation, she said.

Adita said the ministry would limit access to regional entry points instead of blocking roads.

State-owned railway operator PT Kereta Api Indonesia (KAI) has announced that it will give full refunds to passengers who decide to cancel their trips. Those who have booked tickets with national flag carrier Garuda Indonesia, meanwhile, are able to reschedule their flights or receive a refund with vouchers.

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