The Indonesian Government’s plan to waive the visa requirement for
Australian visitors to Bali and other parts of Indonesia has been dropped amid
concerns surrounding repeated turbulence over Jakarta-Canberra diplomatic ties.
Jakarta has decided to only proceed with the visa-free policies for
Chinese, Russian, South Korean and Japanese tourists, Co-ordinating Maritime
Affairs Minister Indroyono Soesilo said on Thursday.
“We have confirmed the
visa-free policy for Japanese citizens. Russia and South Korea will follow suit
soon. For China, we have three months to finalize everything,” he said.
“Tourists from these countries can currently visit Indonesia with a
visa-on-arrival”, Mr Indroyono said.
Mr. Indroyono confirmed that
the counterpart countries would provide similar facilities to Indonesians;
something Australia was not prepared to do.
This back-flip by Indonesia is symptomatic of the underlying
sense of distrust in the relationship between our two countries and Indonesia is miffed that their proposed goodwill
gesture of providing visa-free holidays for the one million Australians
travelling to Bali every year, has not been
reciprocated.
An Australian family of four travelling to Bali
from Australia currently incurs a visa-related cost of around A$140.00 in total. Meanwhile for a Balinese family
wanting to holiday in Australia, they face a fee of around $520.00 before they
even leave home. In addition, they can be made to complete up to 17 pages of
forms.
Young people wanting to travel to Australia on the ‘Holiday and Work’
visa face a fee of $420.00. And we wonder why we cannot encourage more of this huge emerging
middle-class from Indonesia to spend their tourist dollars
here.
At a business and trade level we enjoy close
links with our northern neighbor, but the level of trade is very
underdone.
It’s about time we ‘got real’ about our relationship with Indonesia.
Instead of ‘nice words’ about how deep the relationship is, it’s time we took
action to back up those words.
Easier and cheaper visas for Indonesian families and tourists from
Indonesia should be the starting point.
In the meantime if you were hoping that on your next trip to Bali you would be able to walk through immigration at Bali's International Airport without queueing for the silly Visa-On-Arrival which costs $35.00 each and wastes time, well, sorry, it isn't going to happen.
In the meantime officals in both Australia and Indonesia need to have a good look at themselves and ask why are we happy to make it so difficult for our young people to travel to each others country for holiday and work experience.
We still have much work to be done in achieving mutual respect between neighbours.
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