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Friday, April 30, 2010
Gigolo Movie Not Affect Citra Bali
Alila receives ASEAN Green Hotel Award
UBUD: Alila Manggis in East Bali and Alila Ubud in Gianyar received the ASEAN Green Hotel Award for their commitment to supporting responsible tourism.
The ASEAN Green Hotel Award is one of six ASEAN Tourism Standards considered essential for supporting ASEAN to become a world-class destination.
The award is presented to hotels that measure up to 11 environmental and energy conservation criteria.
Among the criteria are environmental policies and actions for hotel operation, use of green and local products, collaboration with the local community on environmental protection, the hotel's steps to providing staff training programs on environmental management, as well as efficient management of water, energy, waste, air quality and noise pollution.
Organizers of the award said Alila Manggis and Alila Ubud fully embraced Alila's philosophy that commerce, conservation and community could and should be integrated. - JP
http://www.thejakartapost.com
Bali Cultural Center to be built in India
DENPASAR: Bali Hindu Center will be built on a 2-hectare plot near the Ganges River to allow visitors to learn more about the island's culture and religion.
Indra Udayana from Ashram Gandhi Puri said the center would serve as a cultural and religious bridge connecting Balinese and Indian people. The Ganges is considered a sacred river in Hinduism.
"Every year, millions of people visit the site for spiritual enlightenment," Udayana said.
"Therefore, it would be quite strategic to introduce Balinese culture to fellow Hindus from around the world," he said.
The development of the center was an initiative by Hindu leaders such as Pedanda (High Priest) Made Gunung, Ibu Gedong Bagoes Oka and former Bali governors Ida Bagus Mantra and Dewa Made Beratha. JP
The Jakarta Post, Denpasar
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No place like home (except Bali)
CATCHYA later, Melbourne; get outta my face, Australia, I thought to myself as my plane took off from Tullamarine. It's not that I don't love Australia, because I do, I love her from the bottom of her quirky Great Australian Underbite to the top of her cute There's-Something-About-Mary flicky hair-thing around Cape York Peninsula.
But I just needed a bit of time-out from all the Aussieness, so I was heading off on a six-day Aussie-escape holiday to the one place where I could escape all things Aussie. Yeah, I was going to Bali, ha ha, I was off to Bali.
But when the plane took off, I hadn't escaped from Australia because I was with a load of Aussies all going to Bali, too. Hundreds of them all around me, going maaaaaate-this and y'reckon-that, and a honeymoon couple behind me whispering: ''Awww, go on, Nicole, pleeeeeez?/Rack off, Jace, I'm not doing that on a plane, now bugger off and lemme read The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo!'' And most of them were immersing themselves in Balinese culture by knocking down can after can of free Bintang beer. But it'd be okay, we'd be landing in Bali soon.
But when we landed in Bali I still wasn't gone from Australia because my hotel was packed with Aussies shuffling around the hotel grounds - blokes in VB singlets with Warnie sunglasses wrapped round their heads, looking like giant futuristic blowflies. Women in knock-off Crocs and tight denim mini-skirts with ROXY scrawled across the bum, so when they bent over it spelt POXY. And mocktail-swigging mums and dads sunburning in lounge-chairs, yelling: ''BRAYDON, BRENDAN, BRYDEN, GET OUTTA THE POOOOOL AND FINISH YOUR SNNNITZEL FROM THE BUFFFFET! AND YOU, TOO, TAYLAAAA!''
But that was OK, too, because I was going to get out of this hotel and visit the local street markets to get a taste of the real Bali.
But when I got to the street markets of Bali I still hadn't left Australia because the stalls were selling loads of Aussie stuff: Billabong boardies, Rip Curl T-shirts and souvenir boomerangs (traditional Balinese ones that said I HEART BALI in Aboriginal dot-painting). And the Balinese shopkeepers kept asking me: ''Where you from?'' Because they're the nicest, friendliest people on the planet who want me to buy things from them. And as soon as I said ''Australia'', they instantly, instinctively, pulled big happy ocker faces and drawled: ''Oiiiii maaaate, bluddy Aussie, good onya, mongrel.'' And when I walked away without buying anything, they pulled a less-happy ocker face and mumbled: ''Oiiiii maaaate, bluddy Aussie, good onya, mongrel.''
But that was OK because I was going to get out of town and visit the authentic Balinese villages of the highlands.
But when I got to the authentic Balinese villages I was still kind of in Australia because the main street was lined with Aussie sports bars hosting AFL nights, and restaurants done up in green and gold serving ''Auzzie roast, meetpies, french flies''. And in the courtyard of the local Hindu temple, a gamelan player played a haunting melody on his bamboo xylophone that invoked ancient spiritual rituals, which on a closer listen turned out to be Waltzing Matilda.
It was then that I realised I could never escape everything Aussie on my Aussie-escape holiday because this was Bali.
But that was OK, and on my last night I was enjoying a beautiful Balinese seafood meal on a sunsetting Jimbaran Beach, and a strolling troupe of musicians were going around to all the tables of Aussie tourists, playing Land Down Under over and over again. So when they stopped in front of me and said, ''Where you from?'', I couldn't take it any more. I said, ''Canada'' instead, and they said, ''We play Ca-na-da song for you?'' And I said, ''Yes please, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Leonard Cohen, that'd be great,'' but they didn't know who any of those people were and for the first time in my holiday I wished I could be Aussie again because I was stuck there, listening to 20 minutes of Bryan Adams's ungreatest hits.
Source: The Age
Strict regulations needed to preserve Balinese style
The rapid growth of contemporary-styled buildings in Denpasar and other cities in Bali has threatened the existence of traditional buildings, an expert says.
I Ketut Rana Wiarcha, chairperson of Bali chapter of the Indonesian Architects Association, explained Bali used to have strict regulations concerning the construction of buildings on the island.
"In the past, the local authority insisted that any building must be designed adopting traditional Balinese architectural elements to adjust to the island's cultural landscape," he said.
Nowadays, Denpasar is reportedly like an urban city without proper planning and regulation. I Gusti Putu Anindya Putra, head of the provincial planning agency, admitted that such a chaotic situation was due to a lack of proper city planning and regulation.
"Hundreds of buildings in Denpasar and surrounding areas do not refl ect Balinese culture. This might have happened because of a lack coordination between the authority, architects, developers and investors."
Denpasar Mayor I. B. Rai Dharmawijaya Mantra complained that those involved in the construction of buildings had ignored existing bylaw No. 5 issued in 2005.
"They *developers/architects* actually know that regulation. They were just pretending it did not exist," the mayor said.
Based on the bylaw, any building constructed in Bali province must bear Balinese traditional architectural elements.
The mushrooming contemporary buildings with minimalist architectural styles had changed the face of Denpasar, Kuta, Seminyak, Jimbaran, Canggu areas mostly in Badung regency.
"Most of the buildings were constructed without necessary permits," the mayor said.
The mayor also urged local architects to preserve local culture by not violating the regulation for the sake of projects.
"*The architects* must have their own code of ethics. They must be in the front-run in preservation and conservation of old-age Balinese traditional architectures," Mantra said.
Wiarcha commented that the existing bylaw No 5 only regulates the physical buildings and end products.
"There is no article in the by law that touches the roles of architects in properly implementing the rule."
The association has 500 members out of more than 2,000 architects in Bali. Not to mention, numerous architects from Jakarta and other cities even from other countries are also practicing and opening architectural bureaus here in Bali.
The flood of foreign investors had changed property business in Bali. Many have sourced architects from their home countries.
Wasti Atmodjo, THE JAKARTA POST, DENPASAR
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Bali tourists trapped as flights halted
Hundreds of European holiday makers on Bali were unable to return home Sunday along with six million others around the globe due to a volcanic eruption in Iceland.
The would-be travelers have been unable to fly home from Ngurah Rai Airport since Thursday because all European routes have been cancelled over fears planes could suffer catastrophic mechanical failures in contaminated skies over Europe.
Eyjafjallajokull volcano in Iceland erupted Wednesday sending tons of ash and debris into the atmosphere, with winds carrying the ash plume across Europe with airports in France, Germany, the Netherlands, Britain, northern Italy and more halting all flights due to the flight hazard formed by the volcano.
"I can't say exactly how many people are stranded, but it's in the hundreds," said Ngurah Rai Airport duty manager Mujhadi.
"We expect some to start flying to Paris tomorrow, but we will not be sure until more information comes through on the situation in Europe. England is still closed and could remain that way for some days."
Reuters reported that most experts and officials expected the cloud of ash would linger over Europe for several days.
Travel and tourism accounts for around 5 percent of global gross domestic product some US$3 trillion with Europe accounting for a third of that, much of it accruing over the summer months. Not all of this will be lost, but experts estimated a prolonged shutdown could cost up to $5-10 billion dollars a week in the industry.
But the impact will likely be wider. Most of the world's goods by volume may move by sea and land, but transport analysts estimate 40 percent by value moves by air. Through Sunday, a clampdown held across much of Europe, posing a growing problem for businesses especially airlines, estimated to be losing $200 million a day and for thousands of travelers stranded worldwide.
The European aviation agency Eurocontrol said only 4,000 flights were expected in European airspace on Sunday, compared with 24,000 normally. It said a total of 63,000 flights had been cancelled in European airspace since Thursday.
But as air travel across much of Europe was paralyzed for a fourth day on Sunday by a huge cloud of volcanic ash, Reuters reported that Dutch and German test flights carried out without apparent damage seemed to offer some hope of respite.
Dutch airline KLM said inspection of an airliner after a test flight showed no damage to engines or evidence of dangerous ash concentrations. Germany's Lufthansa also reported problem-free test flights, while Italian and French carriers announced they would fly empty airliners on Sunday.
The Association of Dutch Pilots (VNV) said that along with sister organizations it believed a partial resumption of flights, with some restrictions, was possible despite the continuing eruption from an Icelandic volcano.
"The concentration of ash particles in the atmosphere is in all likelihood so little it poses no threat to air transport," said VNV chairman Evert van Zwol.
German air traffic control slightly loosened its ban on flights from the country Sunday, allowing some traffic at Frankfurt and airports in the north. However, British Airways and Irish Aer Lingus highlighted uncertainty over any resumption of flights in the immediate future by canceling all of their flights for Monday.
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Nusa Dua: From forgotten backwater to exclusive resort
Some 30 years ago, there were no luxury hotels, spas or expensive restaurants in the present location of the exclusive resort area of Nusa Dua, or literarily means the two islets referring to the projections of big rocks in the middle of the white stretch of beaches.
If you look up the map of Bali Island, you will find the Nusa Dua area, 30 kilometers south of Bali's provincial capital of Denpasar, in the bottom part of the map overlooking the Indonesian Ocean.
The only thing that the Balinese people could remember so far about this spot was a carpet of coconut groves on the rocky hills. The people were poor and desperate because of their rocky land. Many of them moved to the more fertile areas in the north part of the island to make a living abandoning their property in Bukit Nusa Dua.
Nyoman Sumara, 70, a former resident of Nusa Dua, recalled his memory. ""I left my coconut plants to work as a labor in the city (Denpasar) years ago. I had never imagined Nusa Dua was developed as it is now,"" he said.
There were hundreds or maybe thousands of Nusa Dua residents who gave up their lands because of poverty. ""Now, I would not dare to enter those glittering hotels which were built on the lands once belonging to us,"" Ni Wayan Suratmi, Sumara's wife added.
The Balinese people found Nusa Dua, a holy place with several major temples were built by their ancestor DangHyang Nirartha, a High Priest from Java Island, who was believed to firstly spread Hinduism in Bali.
A number of the Hindu temples are now located within five-star hotels.
""It was quite difficult for us to pray at the temples especially when odalan, temple anniversary,"" explained Sukalami from the neighbor village of Bualu.
Each Hindu temple in Bali has its own disciples who regularly pray and perform various rituals such as piodalan, temple anniversary, or Galungan and Kuningan holidays. The development of various tourist facilities in Nusa Dua has more or less affected religious activities of the neighboring villagers although the hotels' management usually welcomes and allows them to do so.
Forget Sumara and other poor farmers, the real inhabitants of Nusa Dua. Since the early l980s, the Indonesian government and private investors supported by several world's financial bodies including the World Bank launched a big and ambitious project to transformed the barren area into the most well-managed and well-equipped tourist resort in Bali.
Located in a quite secluded area, Nusa Dua was experimented as a pilot project for an integrated modern resort with a touch of Balinese traditional architecture and landscape.
The area was carefully designed as a self-contained resort complex filled with five-star international-chain hotels, a golf course, a convention hall and other facilities.
The master plan of the Nusa Dua complex revealed that the development projects were conducted under a very strict monitoring to prevent or at least to minimize the negative impact on the social and the environment.
The project was intended also to benefit the local people at the maximum.
Since this idyllic project started in l980s, Nusa Dua has an abundant choice of hotels including the Sheratons, Bali Hilton, the Grand Hyatt, Club Med, Nikko Bali, Grand Melia.
The resort, which is currently hosting the Preparatory Committee (Prep-Com )IV for the World Summit on Sustainable Development, is catering to the up market visitors aiming to spend hundreds of US dollars per night in return to exclusive and exotic holidays.
As soon as you enter the gate to the complex, the view of the landscape is amazingly beautiful with a line of pink frangipani flowers and colorful bougainvillea buds, palm trees, foliages along the way to the hotel complexes.
Ngurah Karyadi, an environmentalist, commented entering Nusa Dua is like a sterilized heaven.
""It is so well-ordered. It is like visiting other places outside Bali. Because Bali island always looks friendly and welcoming. Nusa Dua is similar to a fragile crystal doll. Everybody is afraid to touch it without breaking it,"" said Ngurah, who is also the coordinator of the People's Forum.
For those who like staying in affluent hotels and resort complex, Nusa Dua is the right and perfect places. But if you want to taste the real Bali, try to explore other exciting and natural sites.
Rita A.Widiadana, Jakarta Post, Nusa Dua
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Earth Day celebration at Bali Purnati Center
UBUD: Bali will host the TedxBali meeting at the Bali Purnati Center in Ubud Gianyar on Friday to observe Earth Day.
The one-day meeting will focus on how to improve environmental conditions and preserve the earth.A number of speakers, including Arief Rabik from Bamboo Environmental Foundation, will present various topics such as promoting bamboo as an important material.Dr. Bulan Trisna will discuss noise pollution while ethnobotanist Dale Millard will speak on medicinal plants.
D.S. Kung from Michi Retreat will discuss a "Proposal for Ubud," which was named the best city in Asia by Conde Nast Traveller magazine. The professor will focus on the impact of tourism on the city. - JP
Monday, April 26, 2010
Bali Culture and Customs
Bali History
Bali was inhabited by Austronesian peoples by about 2000 BC who migrated originally from Taiwan through Maritime Southeast Asia. Culturally and linguistically, the Balinese are thus closely related to the peoples of the Indonesian archipelago, the Philippines, and Oceania. Stone tools dating from this time have been found near the village of Cekik in the island's west.
Balinese culture was strongly influenced by Indian and Chinese, and particularly Hindu culture, in a process beginning around the 1st century AD. The name Bali dwipa ("Bali island") has been discovered from various inscriptions, including the Blanjong pillar inscription written by Sri Kesari Warmadewa in 914 AD and mentioning "Walidwipa". It was during this time that the complex irrigation system subak was developed to grow rice. Some religious and cultural traditions still in existence today can be traced back to this period. The Hindu Majapahit Empire (12931520 AD) on eastern Java founded a Balinese colony in 1343. When the empire declined, there was an exodus of intellectuals, artists, priests and musicians from Java to Bali in the 15th century.


The first European contact with Bali is thought to have been made by Dutch explorer Cornelis de Houtman who arrived in 1597, though a Portuguese ship had foundered off the Bukit Peninsula as early as 1585 and left a few Portuguese in the service of Dewa Agung Dutch colonial control expanded across the Indonesian archipelago in the nineteenth century (see Dutch East Indies). Their political and economic control over Bali began in the 1840s on the island's north coast by pitting various distrustful Balinese realms against each other. In the late 1890s, struggles between Balinese kingdoms in the island's south were exploited by the Dutch to increase their control.
The Dutch mounted large naval and ground assaults at the Sanur region in 1906 and were met by the thousands of members of the royal family and their followers who fought against the superior Dutch force in a suicidal puputan defensive assault rather than face the humiliation of surrender. Despite Dutch demands for surrender, an estimated 1,000 Balinese marched to their death against the invaders. In the Dutch intervention in Bali (1908), a similar massacre occurred in the face of a Dutch assault in Klungkung. Afterwards the Dutch governors were able to exercise administrative control over the island, but local control over religion and culture generally remained intact. Dutch rule over Bali had come later and was never as well established as in other parts of Indonesia such as Java and Maluku.
In the 1930s, anthropologists Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson, and artists Miguel Covarrubias and Walter Spies, and musicologist Colin McPhee created a western image of Bali as "an enchanted land of aesthetes at peace with themselves and nature", and western tourism first developed on the island.


Imperial Japan occupied Bali during World War II during which time a Balinese military officer, Gusti Ngurah Rai, formed a Balinese 'freedom army'. The lack of institutional changes from the time of Dutch rule however, and the harshness of war requisitions made Japanese rule little better than the Dutch one. Following Japan's Pacific surrender in August 1945, the Dutch promptly returned to Indonesia, including Bali, immediately to reinstate their pre-war colonial administration. This was resisted by the Balinese rebels now using Japanese weapons. On 20 November 1946, the Battle of Marga was fought in Tabanan in central Bali. Colonel I Gusti Ngurah Rai, by then 29 years old, finally rallied his forces in east Bali at Marga Rana, where they made a suicide attack on the heavily armed Dutch. The Balinese battalion was entirely wiped out, breaking the last thread of Balinese military resistance. In 1946 the Dutch constituted Bali as one of the 13 administrative districts of the newly-proclaimed State of East Indonesia, a rival state to the Republic of Indonesia which was proclaimed and headed by Sukarno and Hatta. Bali was included in the "Republic of the United States of Indonesia" when the Netherlands recognised Indonesian independence on 29 December 1949.
The 1963 eruption of Mount Agung killed thousands, created economic havoc and forced many displaced Balinese to be transmigrated to other parts of Indonesia. Mirroring the widening of social divisions across Indonesia in the 1950s and early 1960s, Bali saw conflict between supporters of the traditional caste system, and those rejecting these traditional values. Politically, this was represented by opposing supporters of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) and the Indonesian Nationalist Party (PNI), with tensions and ill-feeling further increased by the PKI's land reform programs. An attempted coup in Jakarta was put down by forces led by General Suharto. The army became the dominant power as it instigated a violent anti-communist purge, in which the army blamed the PKI for the coup. Most estimates suggest that at least 500,000 people were killed across Indonesia, with an estimated 80,000 killed in Bali, equivalent to 5% of the island's population.With no Islamic forces involved as in Java and Sumatra, upper-caste PNI landlords led the extermination of PKI members. As a result of the 1965/66 upheavals, Suharto was able to maneuver Sukarno out of the presidency, and his "New Order" government reestablished relations with western countries. The pre-War Bali as "paradise" was revived in a modern form, and the resulting large growth in tourism has led to a dramatic increase in Balinese standards of living and significant foreign exchange earned for the country. A bombing in 2002 by militant Islamists in the tourist area of Kuta killed 202 people, mostly foreigners. This attack, and another in 2005, severely affected tourism, bringing much economic hardship to the island.
Geography


See also List of bodies of water in Bali and List of mountains in Bali.
The island of Bali lies 3.2 km (2 mi) east of Java, and is approximately 8 degrees south of the equator. Bali and Java are separated by Bali Strait. East to west, the island is approximately 153 km (95 mi) wide and spans approximately 112 km (69 mi) north to south; its land area is 5,632 km².
The highest point is Mount Agung at 3,142 m (9,426 feet) high, an active volcano that last erupted in March 1963. Mountains range from centre to the eastern side, with Mount Agung the easternmost peak. Mount Batur (1,717 m) is also still active; an eruption 30,000 years ago was one of the largest known volcanic events on Earth. In the south the land descends to form an alluvial plain, watered by shallow, north-south flowing rivers, drier in the dry season and overflowing during periods of heavy rain. The longest of these rivers, Ayung River, flows approximately 75 km.
The island is surrounded by coral reefs. Beaches in the south tend to have white sand while those in the north and west have black sand. The beach town of Padangbai in the south east has both. Bali has no major waterways, although the Ho River is navigable by small sampan boats. Black sand beaches between Pasut and Klatingdukuh are being developed for tourism, but apart from the seaside temple of Tanah Lot, they are not yet used for significant tourism.
The largest city is the provincial capital, Denpasar, near the southern coast. Its population is around 300,000. Bali's second-largest city is the old colonial capital, Singaraja, which is located on the north coast and is home to around 100,000 people. Other important cities include the beach resort, Kuta, which is practically part of Denpasar's urban area; and Ubud, which is north of Denpasar, and is known as the island's cultural centre.


Three small islands lie to the immediate south east and all are administratively part of the Klungkung regency of Bali: Nusa Penida, Nusa Lembongan and Nusa Ceningan. These islands are separated from Bali by the Badung Strait.
To the east, the Lombok Strait separates Bali from Lombok and marks the biogeographical division between the fauna of the Indomalayan ecozone and the distinctly different fauna of Australasia. The transition is known as the Wallace Line, named after Alfred Russel Wallace, who first proposed a transition zone between these two major biomes. When sea levels dropped during the Pleistocene ice age, Bali was connected to Java and Sumatra and to the mainland of Asia and shared the Asian fauna, but the deep water of the Lombok Strait continued to keep Lombok and the Lesser Sunda archipelago isolated.
Ecology


Bali Island is situated on the border of the Wallace Line, where transition from the Asian wildlife and flora is made into the Pacific Islands biotope. Bali is virtually the southernmost island with specific Asian fauna and flora and with very few influences from the Pacific Islands like the Yellow-crested Cockatoo and other bird species occur. Bali has around 280 species of birds, including the critically endangered Bali Starling, one of the rarest birds in the world. Others are: Barn Swallow, Black-naped Oriole, Black Racket-tailed Treepie, Crested Serpent-eagle, Crested Treeswift, Dollarbird, Java Sparrow, Lesser Adjutant, Long-tailed Shrike, Milky Stork, Pacific Swallow, Red-rumped Swallow, Sacred Kingfisher, Sea Eagle, Woodswallow, Savanna Nightjar, Stork-billed Kingfisher, Yellow-vented Bulbul, White Heron, Great Egret.
Until the beginning of the 20th century, Bali was home to some large animals such as the wild Banteng, Leopard and even the Bali tiger. The first still occurs in its domestic form, while leopards only in neighboring Java, but the Bali Tiger has completely disappeared, with last recorded one in 1937, when last known specimen was shot. Due to the relative small size of the island and clashes with humans, along with poaching and habitat reduction has driven this unique feline to extinction. It was the smallest and rarest of all tiger species and never caught on film or displayed in zoos, few skins and bones remain in museums around the world as a testimony of its undisputed existence. Today, the largest animals remain the Javan Rusa deer and the Wild Boar. The water monitor can grow to an impressive size and move surprisingly quickly. Two species of deer occur in the island the smaller Muntjak and the larger Javan Rusa deer.


Snakes are represented by green snakes and occasional king and pythons occurring around areas where mice and rats are present. Squirrels are quite commonly encountered, more rare the Asian Palm Civet grown also in coffee farms to produce the expensive and controversial Kopi Luwak. Chiropteras are well represented, perhaps the most famous place to encounter them remains the Goa Lawah (Temple of the Bats) where they are worshipped by the locals and also constitute a tourist attraction, and other cave temples like Gangga Beach ones. Two species of primates occur in the island: the Crab-eating Macaque, known locally as "kera" quite common around human settlements or temples, where they became accustomed to people feeding them, particularly in any of the three so called "monkey forest" temples, with the most popular one in Ubud area. They are also quite often being kept as pets by locals. The second primate, far more rare and elusive is the Silver Leaf Monkey known locally as "lutung". They occur virtually only in Bali Barat National Park, though in decent numbers. Other, rarer mammals include the Leopard Cat, Sunda Pangolin and Black Giant Squirrel.
The rich coral reef around the coast Bali particularly around popular diving spots like Tulamben, Amed, Menjangan or neighboring Nusa Penida host a large amount of marine life, like Hawksbill Turtle, Giant Sunfish, Giant Manta Ray, Giant Moray Eel, Bumphead Parrotfish, Hammerhead Sharks, Reef Sharks, Barracudas, Sea Snakes and so on. Dolphins are commonly encountered on the north coast near Singaraja and Lovina.
Due to human influence many plants have been introduced by humans within the last centuries, particularly since 20th century, making it sometimes hard to distinguish what plants are really native. From the larger trees most common are: Banyan trees, Jackfruit, coconuts, bamboo species, acacia trees and also endless rows of coconuts and banana species. Numerous flowers can be seen: Hibiscus, frangipani, bougainvillea, poinsettia, oleander, jasmine, water lily, roses, begonias, orchids and hydrangeas exist. On higher grounds that receive more moisture, like around Kintamani, certain species of fern trees, mushrooms and even pine trees thrive well. Rice comes in many varieties. Other plants with agricultural value include: salak, mangosteen, corn, Kintamani orange, coffee and water spinach.
Bali Administrative divisions


The province is divided into 8 regencies (kabupaten) and 1 city (kota). Unless otherwise stated, the regency's capital:
- Badung, capital Denpasar
- Bangli, capital Bangli
- Buleleng, capital Singaraja
- Denpasar (city)
- Gianyar, capital Gianyar
- Jembrana, capital Negara
- Karangasem, capital Amlapura
- Klungkung, capital Semarapura
- Tabanan, capital Tabanan
Economy

Three decades ago, the Balinese economy was largely agriculture-based in terms of both output and employment. Tourism is now the largest single industry; and as a result, Bali is one of Indonesia's wealthiest regions. About 80% of Bali's economy depends on tourism.The economy, however, suffered significantly as a result of the terrorist bombings 2002 and 2005. The tourism industry is slowly recovering once again.
Although tourism produces the economy's largest output, agriculture is still the island's biggest employer; most notably rice cultivation. Crops grown in smaller amounts include fruit, vegetables, Coffea arabica and other cash and subsistence crops Fishing also provides a significant number of jobs. Bali is also famous for its artisans who produce a vast array of handicrafts, including batik and ikat cloth and clothing, wooden carvings, stone carvings, painted art and silverware. Notably, individual villages typically adopt a single product, such as wind chimes or wooden furniture.
The Arabica coffee production region is the highland region of Kintamani near Mount Batur. Generally, Balinese coffee is processed using the wet method. This results in a sweet, soft coffee with good consistency. Typical flavors include lemon and other citrus notes. Many coffee farmers in Kintamani are members of a traditional farming system called Subak Abian, which is based on the Hindu philosophy of "Tri Hita Karana". According to this philosophy, the three causes of happiness are good relations with God, other people and the environment. The Subak Abian system is ideally suited to the production of fair trade and organic coffee production. Arabica coffee from Kintamani is the first product in Indonesia to request a Geographical Indication.
Although significant tourism exists in the north, centre and east of the island, the tourism industry is overwhelmingly focused in the south. The main tourist locations are the town of Kuta (with its beach), and its outer suburbs (which were once independent townships) of Legian and Seminyak; the east coast town of Sanur (once the only tourist hub); to the south of the airport is Jimbaran; in the center of the island Ubud; and the newer development of Nusa Dua.
Another increasingly important source of income for Bali is what is called "Congress Tourism" from the frequent international conferences held on the island, especially after the terrorist bombings of 2002 and 2005; ostensibly to resurrect Bali's damaged tourism industry as well as its tarnished image.
The American government lifted its travel warnings in 2008. As of 2009 the Australian government still rates it a 4 danger level (the same as several countries in central Africa) on a scale of 5.
An offshoot of tourism is the growing real estate industry in Bali. Bali real estate has been rapidly developing in the main tourist districts of Kuta, Legian, Seminyak and Oberoi. Most recently, high end 5 star projects are under development on the Bukit peninsula on the south side of the island. Million dollar villas are springing up along the cliff sides of south Bali, commanding panoramic ocean views. Foreign and domestic (many Jakarta individuals and companies are fairly active) investment into other areas of the island also continues to grow. Land prices, despite the worldwide economic crisis have remained stable.
In the last half of 2008, Indonesia's currency had dropped approximately 30% against the US dollar, providing many overseas visitors value for their currencies. Visitor arrivals for 2009 were forecast to drop 8% (which would be higher than 2007 levels), but this is due to the worldwide economic crisis which has also affected the global tourist industry and not due to any travel warnings.
Bali's tourism economy has not only survived the horrible terrorist bombings of 2002 and 2005, the tourism industry has slowly recovered and surpassed its pre-terrorist bombing levels and the longterm trend is a steady increase of visitor arrivals.
The Indonesian Tourism Ministry expects more visitors arrivals in 2010, whose target for visitor arrivals is aimed to be the highest ever. Bali's tourism brand is Bali Shanti Shanti Shanti. Where Shanti derived from Sanskrit "Shanti" meaning peace.
Bali Transportation
Airports: The Ngurah Rai International Airport is located near Jimbaran, on the isthmus joining the southernmost part of the island to the main part of the island. Lt.Col. Wisnu Airfield is found in north-west Bali.
A coastal road surrounds the island, and three major two-lane arteries cross the central mountains at passes reaching to 1,750m in height (at Penelokan). The Ngurah Rai Bypass is a four-lane expressway that partly encircles Denpasar and enables cars to travel quickly in the heavily populated south. Bali has no railway lines.
Bali Demographics
The population of Bali is 3,151,000 (as of 2005). There are an estimated 30,000 expatriates living in Bali.
Religion






Unlike most of Muslim-majority Indonesia, about 93.18% of Bali's population adheres to Balinese Hinduism, formed as a combination of existing local beliefs and Hindu influences from mainland Southeast Asia and South Asia. Minority religions include Islam (4.79%), Christianity (1.38%), and Buddhism (0.64%). These figures do not include immigrants from other parts of Indonesia.
When Islam surpassed Hinduism in Java (16th century), Bali became a refuge for many Hindus. Balinese Hinduism is an amalgam in which gods and demigods are worshipped together with Buddhist heroes, the spirits of ancestors, indigenous agricultural deities and sacred places. Religion as it is practiced in Bali is a composite belief system that embraces not only theology, philosophy, and mythology, but ancestor worship, animism and magic. It pervades nearly every aspect of traditional life. Caste is observed, though less strictly than in India. With an estimated 20,000 temples and shrines, Bali is known as the "Island of the Gods".
Balinese Hinduism has roots in Indian Hinduism and in Buddhism, and adopted the animistic traditions of the indigenous people. This influence strengthened the belief that the gods and goddesses are present in all things. Every element of nature, therefore, possesses its own power, which reflects the power of the gods. A rock, tree, dagger, or woven cloth is a potential home for spirits whose energy can be directed for good or evil. Balinese Hinduism is deeply interwoven with art and ritual, and is less preoccupied with scripture, law, and belief than Islam in Indonesia. Ritualizing states of self-control are a notable feature of religious expression among the people, who for this reason have become famous for their graceful and decorous behavior.
Apart from the majority of Balinese Hindus, there also exist Chinese immigrants whose traditions have melded with that of the locals. As a result, these Sino-Balinese not only embrace their original religion, which is a mixture of Buddhism, Taoism and Confucianism, but also find a way to harmonise it with the local traditions. Hence, it is not uncommon to find local Sino-Balinese during the local temple's odalan. Moreover, Balinese Hindu priests are invited to perform rites alongside a Chinese priest in the event of the death of a Sino-Balinese.[23] Nevertheless, the Sino-Balinese claim to embrace Buddhism for administrative purposes, such as their Identity Cards.
Language
Balinese and Indonesian are the most widely spoken languages in Bali, and the vast majority of Balinese people are bilingual or trilingual. There are several indigenous Balinese languages, but most Balinese can also use the most widely spoken option: modern common Balinese. The usage of different Balinese languages was traditionally determined by the Balinese caste system and by clan membership, but this tradition is diminishing.
English is a common third language (and the primary foreign language) of many Balinese, owing to the requirements of the tourism industry.
Bali Culture


Bali is renowned for its diverse and sophisticated art forms, such as painting, sculpture, woodcarving, handcrafts, and performing arts. Balinese percussion orchestra music, known as gamelan, is highly developed and varied. Balinese performing arts often portray stories from Hindu epics such as the Ramayana but with heavy Balinese influence. Famous Balinese dances include pendet, legong, baris, topeng, barong, gong keybar, and kecak (the monkey dance). Bali boasts one of the most diverse and innovative performing arts cultures in the world, with paid performances at thousands of temple festivals, private ceremonies, or public shows. The Hindu New Year, Nyepi, is celebrated in the spring by a day of silence. On this day everyone stays at home and tourists are encouraged to remain in their hotels. But the day before that large, colourful sculptures of ogoh-ogoh monsters are paraded and finally burned in the evening to drive away evil spirits. Other festivals throughout the year are specified by the Balinese pawukon calendrical system.




Celebrations are held for many occasions such as a tooth-filing (coming-of-age ritual), cremation or odalan (temple festival). One of the most important concepts that Balinese ceremonies have in common is that of désa kala patra, which refers to how ritual performances must be appropriate in both the specific and general social context. Many of the ceremonial art forms such as wayang kulit and topeng are highly improvisatory, providing flexibility for the performer to adapt the performance to the current situation. Many celebrations call for a loud, boisterous atmosphere with lots of activity and the resulting aesthetic, ramé, is distinctively Balinese. Oftentimes two or more gamelan ensembles will be performing well within earshot, and sometimes compete with each other in order to be heard. Likewise, the audience members talk amongst themselves, get up and walk around, or even cheer on the performance, which adds to the many layers of activity and the liveliness typical of ramé.
Kaja and kelod are the Balinese equivalents of North and South, which refer to ones orientation between the island's largest mountain Gunung Agung (kaja), and the sea (kelod). In addition to spatial orientation, kaja and kelod have the connotation of good and evil; gods and ancestors are believed to live on the mountain whereas demons live in the sea. Buildings such as temples and residential homes are spatially oriented by having the most sacred spaces closest to the mountain and the unclean places nearest to the sea.


Most temples have an inner courtyard and an outer courtyard which are arranged with the inner courtyard furthest kaja. These spaces serve as performance venues since most Balinese rituals are accompanied by any combination of music, dance and drama. The performances that take place in the inner courtyard are classified as wali, the most sacred rituals which are offerings exclusively for the gods, while the outer courtyard is where bebali ceremonies are held, which are intended for gods and people. Lastly, performances meant solely for the entertainment of humans take place outside the walls of the temple and are called bali-balihan. This three-tiered system of classification was standardized in 1971 by a committee of Balinese officials and artists in order to better protect the sanctity of the oldest and most sacred Balinese rituals from being performed for a paying audience.
Tourism, Bali's chief industry, has provided the island with a foreign audience that is eager to pay for entertainment, thus creating new performance opportunities and more demand for performers. The impact of tourism is controversial since before it became integrated into the economy, the Balinese performing arts did not exist as a capitalist venture, and were not performed for entertainment outside of their respective ritual context. Since the 1930s sacred rituals such as the barong dance have been performed both in their original contexts, as well as exclusively for paying tourists. This has led to new versions of many of these performances which have developed according to the preferences of foreign audiences; some villages have a barong mask specifically for non-ritual performances as well as an older mask which is only used for sacred performances.
The Balinese eat with their right hand, as the left is impure, a common belief throughout Indonesia. The Balinese do not hand or receive things with their left hand and would not wave at anyone with their left hand.
wikipedia
Bali resorts await holidaymakers
Holiday season is drawing near, and Bali will again be busy after months of little tourist activity.
With the scare over Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), in the past, and a more stable security condition, star-rated hotels and luxury resorts on Bali are hoping for the best.
Since 2002, when Bali suffered a devastating bomb attack, the number of visitors to the island has dwindled.
Hotel owners and managers have been faced with tough decisions on how to meet skyrocketing costs without optimum occupancy. Consequently, hotel occupancy rates, which averaged at between 60 percent and 90 percent in early 2002, plunged to as low as 15 percent after the Oct.12, 2002 blasts
Many tourists, who were formerly Bali regulars, turned to other destinations in neighboring Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam for their holidays.
During the two-year ""down period"", a number of resorts here underwent major renovations.
Keke Hidayat, director of public relations at the Intercontinental Resort Bali in Jimbaran area, said hotels on the island needed to work extra hard to compete with their counterparts in Asia, Australia and the Pacific islands.
""We can't just sit and wait for guests to appear. There are so many proactive options,"" she said.
After a year-long renovation process, the hotel is now ready to welcome families with its Jimbaran Holiday Deal. Unlike other hotels, where children are an afterthought, the Bali Intercontinental perceives that as June and July are a long school holiday, children should be a priority.
The hotel expects an influx of guests in that period: ""We have taken bookings from Australia, Japan and a small number of European guests, as well as from Asian countries, like Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and China,"" she added.
Domestically, she said, there would also be greater interest this year, but Keke was counting on local guests typically booking at the last minute.
Keke highlighted some of the treats that would be available to children at the hotel. There would be Balinese dance classes, kite-making, handicraft and sports activities, she said.
And for parents and other adults, relaxation and luxury await. Keke mentioned a massage on the beach as one way to unwind, while the children would fly their new kites and enjoy the open space that Bali offers.
The newly opened Conrad Bali Resort and Spa is another more-than-attractive option. This sophisticated and luxurious resort is located at Tanjung Benoa, providing guests with stunning views and ambience.
Indeed, there are many luxury resorts to choose from, located in Sanur, Kuta, Nusa Dua, Jimbaran, Ubud, Tabanan and Buleleng, North Bali.
Melia Bali Villas and Spa Resort in Nusa Dua, for instance, has recently renovated its 495 guest rooms. The resort gives businesspeople the chance to leave the office, without totally losing touch with work. It offers high-speed Internet access in 125 of its rooms.
Like Melia Bali Villas and Spa Resort, the Westin Resort, formerly known as Sheraton Nusa Indah Resort, in Nusa Dua complex, has also finished refurbishing its facilities, with total spending hitting US$5 million.
The Westin Resort offers 355 luxurious guest rooms and suites, where modern facilities meet Balinese hospitality.
The Westin Resort is connected to the Bali International Convention Center, which boasts comprehensive and spacious meeting and exhibition facilities. For businesspeople who are also parents, this is an ideal situation.
Actually, the island's tourist industry has some pretty good deals for children. Bali Hilton International is another example. The relaunched Kids Club named Wayan Made Kids Club has a great adventure playground.
The US$60,000 refurbishment includes a new rope climbing-frame, which covers an area of over 400 square meters, with 8 levels rising to a height of well over three meters.
""Safety and security was a major consideration. There is a wall around the entire Kids Club with child-proof entry and exit points,"" said Happy Soebianto, public relations manager of Bali Hilton.
Deddy Sasmita, public relations manager of Hard Rock Bali, feels optimistic about the holiday season, and for good reason, ""We are fully booked,"" he said.
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Bali resorts offer luxury and tranquility
After the mad rush of wedding preparations, and then the event itself, heading to a villa that is surrounded by lush green rice fields, high above Petanu River in Ubud, would be the perfect way to start life as a married couple.
The newly renovated Kamandalu Resort, built to resemble a traditional Balinese village, is offering special packages for honeymooners.
""Our major markets are Japan and the United Kingdom and a new promising market, Australia,"" said Darmawan P. Drajat, Kamandalu's general manager, adding that the company has set up representative offices in the two countries.
More and more young people plan to hold their weddings or spend their honeymoons in Ubud's resorts, he said.
Kamandalu, he said, comprises eight pavilions, five family pavilions, 19 garden villas, four Jacuzzi villas, eight pool villas, five deluxe pool villas and two double-bedrooms, with rates between US$300 and $800.
Darmawan said young Japanese executives and Australian tourists were starting to pick Ubud as a holiday destination, whereas before visitors had mostly been older Japanese couples or groups of middle-aged Europeans.
""Ubud has never been as energetic and lively as Kuta is. But, the fact that young visitors are now interested in this art village is expected to boost the tourism-related industry, which has suffered from global and regional influences over the last decade, including SARS and the Iraq war,"" he said.
Some resorts and villas in Ubud, like Kamandalu, are working with small and medium enterprises managed by local artisans and entrepreneurs. ""We procure most of our hotel amenities and spa ingredients from local artisans. We are very proud to promote their products while at the same time helping to improve their businesses,"" Darmawan said.
Kamandalu like other accommodation in Ubud is gearing up to prepare for the upcoming peak seasons in the months of July to August and November to December.
""We have received orders from our agents, particularly from Japan (60 percent) for the coming season, when occupancy usually reaches 80 to 90 percent,"" he said.
Ubud in Gianyar, 30 kilometer north of Denpasar, is home to many exclusive resorts such as Alila Ubud, Amandari and Maya Ubud.
Bali is teeming with world-class resorts. The once-barren hill of Jimbaran, 15 minutes drive from the Ngurah Rai International Airport, has become a favorite escape for the rich and famous.
Shanta de Silva, resort manager of Bali Intercontinental is optimistic about the hospitality industry on Bali. ""We had a very good year in 2004 with increasing number of visitors, the rich in particular, to the island. We are expecting a better year in 2005,"" he said enthusiastically.
The tsunami catastrophe, he said, slightly affected tourism in the Southeast Asian region including Bali. ""But only between January and February. Since early March, the market has picked up,"" he said.
Bali, he said, has always been one of the world's top tourism destinations. ""We opened The Club Intercontinental in July 2004 and the response has been very positive, particularly from the Japanese, European and Australian markets,"" he said.
Surprisingly, many domestic guests also use this facility. ""We have a strong market in Jakarta and Surabaya,"" de Silva said.
The Ritz-Carlton - Bali Resort & Spa, perched on a bluff overlooking azure Indian Ocean, embraces the mystique of Bali, its natural beauty and the inherent grace and hospitality of its people.
The resort, also located in Jimbaran, offers 375 guest rooms, suites, villas, 30 restaurants and lounges and a comprehensive spa complex, said Meutia Irataliana, the public relation coordinator
Meanwhile Bali Thalasso & Spa, located near The Ritz-Carlton, offers more than 60 different spa treatments and features one of the world's largest Aquatonic seawater pool.
The island's hottest destinations are no longer centered in Nusa Dua, Sanur, Kuta and Jimbaran but are found in the far-flung areas of Negara in Jembrana, Klungkung and Karangasem in East Bali, as well as the northern part of Bali.
""But, the market is not saturated because each area offers a different ambience and different natural surrounding,"" Darmawan said.
Hoteliers in Bali look forward to the opening of new hotels and villas including Bvlgari in the coming months.
Andrew Tan, Singapore Airline's manager in Bali, previously said that the airline is closely cooperating with numerous resorts, hotels and villas in Bali.
""We are offering significant discounts at numerous hotels and resorts including Melia Bali in Nusa Dua, Kupu-Kupu Barong villa in Ubud as benefit for SIA passengers,"" Tan said.
""It is our effort to bring visitors to Bali,"" he said.
The Jakarta Post, JakartaBali resorts, still a tropical paradise
Renowned for its breathtaking landscapes, white sands and myriad cultural and traditional attractions, Bali has become one of the world's most popular destinations.
In the last few years, foreign and domestic tourists have combined leisure and business while on the island, increasing the demand for quality resorts.
Bali fortunately has an ample choice of international-standard resorts, which offer multifarious services compounding business and pleasure activities for their opulent clientele.
Visitors can choose resort facilities which suit their personal needs.
Bali's first resort areas Kuta and Legian, which are 12 kilometers southwest of Denpasar, have a number of good hotels and resorts ready to serve holidaymakers as well as businessmen.
Although the areas have become too commercialized and crowded, there are still some places to hide out. Among the best resorts here are the Oberoi (covers 15 acres of land) which offers tranquility and privacy, Kul Kul Beach resort and Bali Dynasty.
Sanur, Bali's second resort area boasts numerous restaurants, shops and hotels such as Hotel Sanur Beach, Bali Hyatt and Tandjung Sari. The wide beach, framed by shallow coral reefs and white sands, is a perfect site for snorkeling, boating and wind surfing.
To the south, Nusa Dua is Bali's first integrated and well-planned resort area, which consist of two tiny islands linked to the mainland by a reinforced sand spit. There are several good resorts in the area including Amanusa, Sheraton Laguna (next to Sheraton Nusa Indah Convention Center), Bali Hilton International and the Grand Hyatt.
Ubud, which was renowned as an art colony in the l930s and has since grown into the island's main cultural center, is an excellent base from which to explore Bali's interior.
There are many excellent resorts in this art village such as Amandari, a modern resort which blends traditional and modern architectural elements. Other resorts include Four Season Resort at Sayan (near Ayung River), Ibah Luxury Villas, Pita Maha and Kokokan Hotel.
Once an almost barren fishing village, Jimbaran Bay, 20 km southwest of Denpasar, has been transformed into an elegant resort area with diamond-star facilities like Ritz Carlton, Bali Cliff Resort, Four Seasons Resorts and Hotel Inter-Continental Bali.
Bali has also expanded its resort areas as far as Canggu (Hotel Tugu), Tabanan (Le Meridien and Bali Nirwana Resort) and Candi Dasa area in Klungkung, East Bali, as well as Lovina in Buleleng regency and Menjangan Jungle and Beach resort in West Bali.
Potential clients
With such a large number of beautiful and world-class resort facilities, people may wonder whether the island's tourist industry has been affected by Indonesia's burgeoning economic problems.
I Gde Wiratha, chairman of the Bali branch of the Indonesian Hotel and Restaurant Association (PHRI) said Bali's tourist industry was beginning to recover after the l998 riot, but the unstable political and social conditions might still haunt the industry.
""The present situation has certainly influenced the growth of tourist-related businesses on the island and we are uncertain of what is going to happen in the coming months,"" Wiratha explained.
There has been visit cancellations as travel advisories issued by several foreign countries discouraged their citizens from traveling to Indonesia, including Bali.
But Minister of Culture and Tourism I Gde Ardhika is convinced that Bali is still the favorite destination of local and foreign tourists.
Bali has become the ""in"" destination among single Japanese females in their 20s and 30s who enjoy relaxing at expensive hotels on the tropical island.
According to the Japan Tourist Bureau (JTB), Indonesia, Bali in particular, will see an influx of 15,000 Japanese tourists during the holiday seasons, a 166.7 percent increase from the year before.
The latest data from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism revealed that the number of tourist arrivals in January this year was 330,094, a 12.3 percent increase from the same period in l999.
In 2000, the country received 5.06 million foreign visitors, slightly less than its target of 5.1 million visitors.
In January, the number of tourist arrivals at Ngurah Rai Airport in Bali increased by 14.94 percent compared to the same period in 2000.
The increase in the number of tourist arrivals may boost the island's economy.
A recent survey conducted by local tourism authorities showed that a foreign tourist visiting Bali spent an average of US$77.35 per day and stayed 11 days on average last year.
The survey conducted on 3,884 tourists also showed that foreign tourists in Bali spend $3.3 million in total, adding that Japanese tourists spent the most ($589,400), followed by British tourists ($322,200) and Australians ($238,300).
Mark Griffith, general manager of Le Meridien Hotel at Bali Nirwana Resort in Tabanan, confirmed that the resort business was still flourishing.
He said Bali still had a good reputation among foreigners.
""It's lucky that many tourists rarely associate Bali with Indonesia,"" the general manager said.
Currently, Australia, Japan and Europe remain strong markets for the Bali tourist industry.
Griffith added that the current multidimensional crisis had influenced tourist-related industries. ""But, we should not just sit and do nothing,"" he said.
To promote his hotel and Bali in general, Griffith said the management had optimized its strong international chains in various tourist markets worldwide.
""Bali has so many good features as a tourist destination, such as good hotels and resorts in addition to its rich culture and tradition,"" he said.
He said his company was now penetrating new markets including Russia, France, Middle East and China.
Presently, the hotel's clients come from Europe (35 percent), Indonesia (17 percent), the United States (8 percent) and Japan (8 percent).
""Many of our guests come from Tokyo, London or New York. For them, Bali's resorts are amazingly peaceful and beautiful,"" he said.
A number of hotel and resort operators shared his optimism.
An official of Sheraton Laguna in Nusa Dua said recently that in December 2000, the occupancy rate of the hotel reached about 84 percent.
Bali governor Dewa Beratha admitted that although hotel and tourist industries were still strong, new investments in the industries were substantially decreasing.
Last year, authorities in Bali approved foreign investment plans worth $141.5 million, compared to $426 million a year earlier.
Foreign investors in Bali were engaged in tourism consulting services and operation of water recreation facilities with an investment of $119.5 million. The hotel industry came in second with a total investment of $13.9 million, followed by the trade sector with $3.6 million.
Foreign investments in the hotel industry plunged to $112 million in l999 and to $13.9 million in 2000 compared to $255.5 million in l998.
He said the province would need Rp 2.4 trillion in investment to achieve a 3.8 percent growth.
Bali is too crowded now and no longer needs new hotels or resorts. The island already has a lot of resorts where visitors can enjoy the beauty of Bali while doing business. (raw)
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Keeping Bali special, wonderful for tourists
""The Island Paradise"", ""the Morning of the World"" and the ""Island of the Gods"" are among the glorifying titles attributed to this ""Jewel in Indonesia's Tourist Crown"".
But in order to retain the special character and culture of Bali that hasmade such epithets appropriate, care and caution will have to be exercised.The worst excesses of a quite different and far less desirable culture -- namely that of a shallow tourist culture -- are and will likely continue toundermine the cultural integrity of the island.
Similarly, the overbearing nature of a tourist culture is undermining thespecial qualities that have for so many years brought so many tourists to Bali.
What, then, constitutes this potentially damaging tourist culture? Anyonewho has taken a walk on Kuta or Sanur Beach or walked among the many shops in Bali selling anything from ""I've been there/done that"" T-shirts through to fine and expensive art pieces will be familiar with one attribute of this tourist mentality.
Street hawkers of necklaces, bracelets, rings, watches, sunglasses, sun hats, sarongs, wood carvings, paintings, shells, manicures, pedicures, massages, temporary tattoos ... (the list goes on) swarm around the haplessvisitor like bees around a honey pot. While there is nothing too damaging in the selling of mementos or services to make a visitor's time and memories of a place in some way more special, there does need to be some degree of control and respect brought to such trade.
Verbatim comments from just a handful of visitors to the island recently illustrate how excessive attempts to sell to the tourist can conjure up negative sentiments which Bali could do without.
An visitor from English noted ""I couldn't believe that people were tryingto sell me souvenirs right in the middle of Besakih Temple -- a holy place that I was trying to respect, even if they could not"".
Further, a Swedish couple spoke of being ""constantly harassed by people asking us to buy their trinkets"", and the female partner spoke of feeling ""threatened by men standing on street corners calling out ""Hey lady, you want transport? Where do you want to go?""
Similarly, two travelers from Austria noted that they could not ""escape from people trying to sell you something or other; they just won't leave you alone. Even if you are lying in the sun on the beach.""
Perhaps most disturbing for Bali are the comments of a backpacker from Holland who expressed discomfort upon arrival from Thailand: ""In Bali the people are always trying to get you to buy something. In Thailand if I asked for directions, sometimes the people would actually take me there. Here they either say I don't know or, oh, you want to buy a map, do you?""
It has to be recognized that these are the comments of only a handful of visitors, but further observations in Bali suggest that they are not exceptional or excessive and may even be considered quite typical experiences. Indeed, further observations tend to suggest that these experiences are quite modest. Street selling in Bali also has a more unsavory and unacceptable nature, which is far more threatening to the Island of the Gods.
Illicit and illegal commodities and services are also offered to the visitor to Bali by street sellers. It is doubtful whether there are many places in the world where the oldest profession has not at sometime been practiced. While one moment, you may be offered transport, the next it could be the services of a woman.
Distasteful
It seems, then, that these street sellers of transportation services (whomay approach with a smile and a ""welcome to Bali"") may also be street pimpsfor the sex industry in Bali. Offers of sexual services are unsavory enoughbut when they are followed with a sales pitch of ""I have young, clean girlsfor you, mister,"" such an encounter is rendered all the more distasteful.
Similarly distasteful, but perhaps more worrying, are the offers of drugsthat may readily be encountered on the streets of Bali. Currently in Indonesia, hardly a day goes by without news of the seizure of illegal narcotics at ports of entry to the country or the capture of drug dealers by the law enforcement agencies or even the gunning down of drug runners.
Indonesia is a young country and the average age of its population speaksof a relatively young populace. Almost inevitably, therefore, Indonesia is experiencing the development of its own youth culture, but it is to be hoped that illegal and dangerous drugs can be kept out of such a culture.
In Bali, though, the offers of drugs suggest that narcotics are finding their way onto Indonesian soil and that the supply lines of anything from soft right through to hard (and dangerous) drugs are being successfully maintained. It would appear that Bali needs greater law enforcement effortsto curb these supplies. It is, of course, difficult to determine the exactsources of these supply lines but on the streets of Bali greater efforts may be made to at least confine, hinder and even prevent the activities of sellers.
The problem of hawkers of legal souvenirs and mementos of Bali is, surely, mostly a problem of degree and thus regulation. It is doubtful thatanyone is really offended by being approached by a seller during a typical day's holiday in Bali but when one is approached by, literally, one every minute of every day in Bali then the degree of acceptability is probably being exceeded and irritation and annoyance is likely to follow close by. With regulation, the number of street sellers in a particular location at any one time could be controlled and also certain locations may be deemed as off limits to hawkers -- such as temples or museum grounds.
Hawkers and peddlers of illegal commodities and services present a different challenge. Sellers of souvenirs and gifts present a challenge of control which may be quite readily achieved through the issuance of licenses. Illegal and illicit sellers present a challenge of detection and,thence, the application of the law.
Perhaps a starting point for the streets of Bali would be a greater uniformed police presence and the setting up of a telephone drugs hotline to gather and disseminate information about drugs.
Some may suggest that a greater police presence would go against the holiday atmosphere of an island such as Bali, but the comments of an American visitor recently are worthy of note. In the context of disturbances on Lombok he observed ""If trouble starts in Bali, I am happy to see the police and the Army on the streets to restore peace.""
If Bali is to retain its peaceful and special character, then many battles will have to be won in the war against the worst excesses of the tourist trade. In particular, the battles and victories currently occurringthroughout Indonesia against the drugs trade will have to be maintained to prevent Bali's good name from becoming sullied.
Bali is a remarkable and exotic island -- long may it remain so for both the people of Bali and the millions of guests that the island has welcomed to its shores.
-- The writer lives and works in West Java and has enjoyed a number of stays in Bali.