JakartaPost-Apr 28

Amid a resurgence of COVID-19 cases globally and growing concerns of more transmissible coronavirus variants, doubts have been raised as to whether Indonesia’s quarantine policy would be sufficient in protecting the country from these threats. Current rules require international travelers to quarantine for five days upon arriving in Indonesia, but travel from India is now an exception due to the country’s world record-breaking daily coronavirus cases. Describing India’s COVID-19 situation as “worrying”, Indonesia has followed several other countries in temporarily suspending visa issuances to Indian nationals and foreigners who have traveled to the South Asian country within the past 14 days. Experts, however, say that the restrictions are not tight enough and have called on the government to require all inbound international travelers — regardless of their point of departure — to undergo the same 14-day quarantine period. They emphasized that there was no scientific evidence supporting the five-day quarantine policy.

Read more at: https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2021/04/28/indonesias-5-day-quarantine-rule-too-risky-amid-case-resurgence-new-variant-experts.html.