Chinese tourists return to Bali


Denpasar: Donning yellow “Bali” hats featuring a surfer as the last letter, Chinese tourists walked along the Indonesian backpacker hotspot’s pristine blue waters, forgetting three years of Covid-19 misery.

Exploring “turtle island”, taking day trips to neighbouring Lombok and hitting Bali’s famed beaches, the world’s biggest-spending tourists were back after the Lunar New Year kicked off and Beijing reopened to the world last month.

“I am especially happy to travel because, before the pandemic, I was someone who liked to travel, to see the sights, experience different cultures and people,” Li Zhao-long, a 28-year-old internet company worker from Kunming in southwest Yunnan province, said.

“Three years on, being able to come from China to Indonesia, I am extremely happy and overjoyed.”

Chinese holidaymakers have endured years of lockdowns and travel restrictions driven by Beijing’s pursuit of its “zero-Covid” policy, followed by a sudden reopening and accompanying spike in infections.

Now a lucky few armed with selfie-sticks and clad in tropical shirts and straw hats are on long-awaited getaways to the “Island of Gods”.

In recent years Chinese visitor numbers to Bali plunged after both countries closed their borders at the height of the pandemic.

But Indonesia’s tourism minister said Jakarta was aiming for a massive rebound from those lows and estimated the country would welcome 253,000 Chinese tourists this year. Balinese officials are even more bullish, hoping for the return of two-thirds of the 1.2 million Chinese visitors who came to the island pre-pandemic – making them the second biggest group of tourists behind Australians.

Though only several hundred Chinese tourists have arrived so far on a once-weekly flight from Shenzhen, the Indonesian government says four more airlines have applied to fly regularly to Bali from China.

Officials are anticipating a return to normal Chinese tourist levels – which once amounted to a fifth of all visitors – on the island by 2025.

The government also plans to ramp up its marketing of Bali as a paradise destination, according to the tourism minister.

At a mall in Denpasar, Dong Yi was one of those who didn’t need to be persuaded, vowing to return to Indonesia now mainlanders could travel back and forth.

“From the moment I stepped off the plane, I could feel the passionate hospitality of the Bali islanders. I really like it here,” said the 47-year-old finance worker.

“Li said the pandemic was “tough” for him and his compatriots, and after the agonising three-year wait, “just being able to leave the country is a happy occasion”.

China, relatively unscathed by the virus after its initial outbreaks thanks to draconian measures, has faced its biggest-ever case surge in recent weeks, with about 80% of the population believed to have contracted Covid. — AFP

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