As Bali losses hit $1 billion, Jokowi seeks to calm tourists

epa05430084 Tourists visit the Tanah Lot Temple, in Tabanan, Bali, Indonesia, 18 July 2016. After the introduction of visa free policies for 169 countries, Indonesian Directorate General of Immigration recorded approximately six million foreign tourists visiting the country.  EPA/MADE NAGI

Bloomberg

As losses from an erupting volcano in Bali nears $1 billion, Indonesian President Joko Widodo and his deputy were expected to visit the island to show the world that it’s a safe destination for Christmas and new year holidaymakers.
Widodo, also known as Jokowi, visited Bali and chaired a meeting of his cabinet, the president’s office said in a statement. Vice President Muhammad Jusuf Kalla will celebrate the new year in the island, named the world’s top travel destination by TripAdvisor Inc. this year. Indonesia’s Tourism Ministry says tourists are safe outside an exclusion zone comprising a radius of about 10 kilometres around eastern Bali’s Mount Agung, which has been spewing ash and smoke since
November 21.
Jokowi’s administration is desperate to lure tourists back to Bali, also known as the island of gods, as tourism accounts for about 70 percent of the province’s income. Losses mounted to
11 trillion rupiah ($812 million) since a volcanic alert was first
issued on September 21, according to the nation’s disaster
mitigation agency.
Chinese visitors, the largest bloc of tourists to Indonesia, are skipping Bali following a travel warning by Beijing, The Jakarta Post reported, citing Indonesia’s Tourism Minister Arief Yahya.
“We want to show that Bali is safe,” Jokowi said in a statement, explaining the rationale for holding the cabinet meeting in the island city. The president will discuss with his cabinet the impact of the volcano on Bali’s economy among other issues, according to the statement.
Hotel room occupancy in Bali is down to 20 percent, the Post reported, citing the Indonesian Hotel and Restaurant Association.
Almost a million people had been expected to visit Bali in
December and January combined, according to Anak Agung Gede Yuniartha Putra, the chief of Bali’s tourism office.
Now, expectations are for not less than half that projection.

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