http://thejakartaglobe.com/home/tourism-officials-see-red-over-scrapping-of-7-day-visas/355117

January 27, 2010 
Tourism Officials See Red Over Scrapping of 7-Day Visas
Two government departments look set for a clash of ideas over the scrapping on 
Tuesday of seven-day visas on arrival for foreigners arriving in Indonesia.

Scrapping the $10 visas and leaving only the $25 visas, which is valid for 30 
days, will encourage foreign tourists to stay longer as well as curb graft 
among immigration officials, Maroloan Barimbing, the spokesman for the 
Directorate General of Immigration under the Ministry of Justice and Human 
Rights, said on Wednesday.

Maroloan said visitors must now buy the 30-day visa regardless of how long they 
plan to stay. As a bonus, they will now be able to extend the visa by another 
30 days without leaving the country, immigration officials have said. 

But scrapping the seven-day option has proved immediately controversial, with 
the Culture and Tourism Ministry taking the unusual step of publicly  
denouncing it as likely to actually reduce tourist arrivals. 

"I am worried the regulation would affect foreign tourists who make frequent 
short stays," Firmansyah Hakim, the ministry's director general of tourism 
destination development, told the Jakarta Globe Wednesday.

He said his ministry was currently reviewing the potential impact on tourist 
numbers. "We are going to ask the immigration department to sit down with us 
and hopefully we can come up with a solution," he said.

Industry experts have said the global economic crisis has shifted many tourists 
from long stays to shorter visits. In 2009, tourists stayed an average of 8.58 
days, continuing a trend toward shorter stays since 2000, the Tourism Ministry 
reported. The low figure demonstrates that a significant number of visitors - 
especially those arriving by land from Malaysia and Singapore at Batam in Riau 
Islands province - come for stays of less than seven days and will now have to 
pay extra.

"Visitors from immediate border countries will likely think twice before going 
for a short trip in our country," Firmansyah said.
Maroloan defended the move, saying visitors planning only short stays would be 
tempted to stay for longer as they would automatically have a 30-day visa.

"We hope this policy will extend tourists' stays in Indonesia, giving them a 
chance to visit more places in the country," he said.
"The policy will also simplify the supervision of overstaying foreign tourists 
because there is only one visa option."

He said the decision was also meant to combat corruption. Last year, the 
Supreme Audit Agency (BPK) caught the ministry off guard by revealing it had 
found more than Rp 3 billion ($321,000) in unreported fees for visas on arrival 
collected over a six-month period at Ngurah Rai International Airport in 
Denpasar, Bali.

The ministry discovered that officials had been defrauding travelers by issuing 
$10 visas to those who paid $25 and pocketing the difference. Maroloan said 
officers in charge were punished by having their pay rises frozen. 

The ministry conducted a similar inspection at Soekarno-Hatta International 
Airport in Jakarta but the spokesman said no irregularities were found.

The immigration department was listed as one of the country's most corrupt 
public institutions in a 2009 bribery index survey released by Transparency 
International Indonesia.


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