The Indonesian government has decided to extend the implementation of the community activity restrictions (PPKM) outside Java and Bali from April 12 to April 25.
The Indonesian government has decided to extend the public mobility restrictions, locally known as PPKM, outside Java and Bali to Dec. 6, Coordinating Minister for the Economy Airlangga Hartarto said on Monday.
The Indonesian government has decided to extend the policy on public mobility restrictions, locally known as PPKM, outside the islands of Java and Bali from Jan. 4 to 17, 2022 although Covid-19 cases continue to decline, a senior minister said on Monday.
The Indonesian government on Monday decided to extend its Covid-19 restrictions on public activities, locally known as PPKM, on the country's most populated island of Java and resort of Bali for another week.
The Indonesian government has expanded its emergency restrictions (locally known as PPKM) to 15 regions outside Java and Bali from July 12 to 20, according to a senior minister on Friday.
JAKARTA (The Jakarta Post/ANN): Despite the emergence of new urban centres on other islands, the Indonesian population of over 270 million people remains concentrated on Java as other islands still fail to catch up with the development achieved on the country’s most populous island.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo said in a video released on Saturday (Aug 7) that Covid-19 infections have started to surge outside the populous Java-Bali islands, and that movement restrictions are needed to stem transmission.
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesian President Joko Widodo said in a video released Saturday that COVID-19 infections have started to surge outside the populous Java-Bali islands, and that movement restrictions are needed to stem transmission.
THE government will continue to implement the lowest level of public activity restrictions (PPKM) until early next month, assuring that the loosened curbs would be enough to contain a recent spike in Covid-19 cases.
The Indonesian government has extended the public activity restrictions, locally known as PPKM, in Java and Bali until Aug 16, while reopening shopping centres as the number Covid-19 cases has declined in those islands, senior ministers said.
The number of Covid-19 cases in Indonesia rose by 32,081 within one day to 3,718,821, with the death toll adding by 2,048 to 110,619, the Health Ministry said on Tuesday.
The resort island of Bali reopened for international travellers to visit its shops and white-sand beaches for the first time in more than a year – if they’re vaccinated, test negative, hail from certain countries, quarantine and heed restrictions in public.
Health authorities and hospitals across the archipelago are bracing for a potentially devastating “third wave” of Covid-19 infections, as public mobility increases amid the loosening of Covid-19 restrictions and a dip in new cases.
Indonesia said on Monday (Feb 14) that it plans to cut the quarantine period imposed on travellers - both foreigners and citizens who have had a booster shot - from five to three days, as it is starting to see signs of slowing spread of Covid-19.
Indonesia will ask people to show proof of a third Covid-19 vaccine shot to access crowded areas as the government banks on inoculation to manage an increase in cases.
The Indonesian government has decided to extend its four-tiered restrictions on public activities (locally abbreviated as PPKM) on the country's most populated island of Java and the resort spot of Bali as well as a number of provinces outside the two islands for another week.
The government is expanding the emergency public activity restrictions (PPKM Darurat) to 15 cities and regencies outside of Java and Bali as the country battles the “second wave” of coronavirus infections, driven primarily by the more transmissible Delta variant.
Indonesia confirmed 130 new Covid-19 cases on Monday, raising its tally of infections to 4,257,815, according to the country's Health Ministry.
Indonesia has registered more than four million Covid-19 cases since the first case was confirmed in the country in March last year.
JAKARTA said that it plans to cut the quarantine period for travellers – both foreigners and citizens who have had a booster shot – from five to three days with officials pointing to signs of a slowdown in Covid-19 cases.