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Australians are raring to start sipping sexily-named cocktails in overseas infinity pools again. As well as some other stuff (seeing family; friends, etc. who live overseas).Speaking of fleeing to exotic pastures, after a long year and a half with bad news breaking in waves, this week we’ve had a number of tantalising tidbits of information grace our brains.The government’s promises about overseas travel happening by Christmas are being made with increasing certainty, with tourism minister Dan Tehan recently saying fully vaccinated Australians will be allowed to travel overseas by December “at the lastest.”Airlines are now, then, after telling Australian authorities they really need to get their sh*t together (else risk super expensive prices) able to start planning better for 2022.Qantas, for one, is now scheduling flights to Bali for the end of March 2022. This is a little earlier than previous reports suggested travel from Australia to Bali could return.
Watch tourists enjoying Bali in the video below (video credit: @thelosttwo)
Speaking about the flights pencilled in to start up again in December, Tourism minister Tehan said quarantine requirements will still be in place for countries that Australia hasn’t formed a travel bubble with by then.Tehan said the government hopes to be able to remove hotel quarantine, but testing needs to be done first.“One of the hopes we have, especially in the lead-up to Christmas, is that we’ll be able to see states and territories putting in place home quarantine arrangements for returning Australians. We still have a little bit of work to do on that.”“When an individual state hits that 80 per cent vax rate, it means that outbound travel will resume. People will be able to freely travel outside of Australia with no restrictions or limitations.”
“Obviously, it will depend on the requirements that have been put in place of the countries they are travelling with.”
This news comes as Indonesia’s second wave of COVID infections begins to come down, just weeks after the country saw its peak of 50,000 new cases per day. Indonesia continues to see thousands of infections per day.The Indonesian government, however, has flagged plans to open Bali (the holiday isle 1.23million Australians visited in 2019) as soon as October, with foreigners expected to be allowed back in from November, once 70 per cent of the local population has been vaccinated.Indonesia has also warned it will be cracking down on unruly antics by tourists, the likes of which you can see in the video below.
Influencers face deportation from Bali after Youtube stunt
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The post ‘Bali Is Back, Baby!’: Crucial Dates For 2022 Travel Revealed appeared first on DMARGE Australia.