Spike in virus cases dents hopes of reviving S-E Asia's holiday hotspots
Plans to reopen popular tourist destinations such as Bali and Phuket have stalled
Bangkok
A SPIKE in novel coronavirus infections in Indonesia's holiday island of Bali and Thailand's first locally transmitted case in 100 days have dealt further blows to South-east Asian hopes of reviving vital tourism industries.
Plans to reopen Bali to foreign tourists from September have been postponed indefinitely, while Thailand's proposal for the cautious reopening of Phuket island has come into doubt.
As well as trying to encourage domestic tourism industries, some South-east Asian countries have been considering "travel bubbles" with others to get businesses restarted.
Bali initially appeared to weather the health crisis better than other parts of Indonesia, which has suffered South-east Asia's biggest death toll by far. But coronavirus cases have spiked after it reopened its borders to domestic tourism at the end of July. "Increasing domestic tourism is one important factor for increasing cases in Bali," said Pandu Riono, an epidemiologist from the University of Indonesia.
While Ketut Suarjaya, the head of Bali's health agency, said domestic tourism was not to blame for the spike in cases, others see Bali's experience as a warning of the dangers of reopening borders too soon. Epidemiologists and public health experts said the arrival of tourists in Bali not only made infection from other parts of Indonesia more likely, but underscored shortcomings in fighting the pandemic - namely a lack of testing and contact tracing. Public health experts also said another likely contributing factor was the arrival of the more infectious mutation of the virus, known as D614G.
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Bali posted a record 196 coronavirus cases on Friday, the fifth consecutive daily record. Daily cases in the holiday island almost tripled on average over the past six weeks, while the death tally doubled to 116 over that period. Indonesia's economy had its first quarterly contraction in over two decades in the second quarter - with Bali's economy shrinking even more than the rest of the country at nearly 11 per cent.
Thailand, where foreign visitor spending made up over 11 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) last year, has been hit even harder by the collapse in tourism despite better managing the pandemic - also contracting the most since the Asian financial crisis in Q2.
The country suspended plans for a "travel bubble" agreement with select countries in August as new daily coronavirus cases rose in parts of Asia. Yuthasak Supasorn, governor of the official Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT), said the cautious reopening of Phuket to foreign tourists would likely be delayed until after the planned start date of Oct 1.He added that he hoped it would still start during Europe's winter - Thailand's tourist high season.
Vietnam's local tourism reopening, after initially clearing itself of the virus, also took a knock when a new outbreak was discovered in the resort city of Danang in July, forcing it to go under a strict lockdown that was only lifted on Monday. REUTERS
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