TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Monday, 16th February 2026
Page 1999

Bali airports back to normal operations for now

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OPERATIONS at both Ngurah Rai International Airport Bali and Lombok International Airport are back to normal after reopening last Sunday and Saturday respectively.

However, as eruptions at Mount Raung are still ongoing, the Indonesian trasnportation authority said there is still possiblity for the airports to close again if the winds blow volcanic ashes towards the airport.

I Ketut Ardana, chairman of the Association of the Indonesian Tours and Travel Agencies (ASITA) Bali Chapter said: “It is a force majeur and the industry here is hand in hand in helping the guests as much as we can. Most airlines are helping with waiving cancellaton fees and some are giving accommodation for those who could not enter Bali.”

“We learnt of some problems with stranded passengers who did not have extra funds for extending their stay in hotels.”

Indonesia Hotel and Restaurant Association Bali Chapter, had issued a circular letter to the industry, including travel companies, to waive the overstay charges for stranded passengers.

“Unfortunately, we had received the notice a bit late and some clients had been charged,” Ardana said.

Nina Zen, regional director of sales and marketing, Swiss-Belhotel International said the over supply of rooms in Bali helped.

Giving an example of her hotel in Seminyak: “We are running 65-68 per cent occupancy in our hotel in Seminyak, so we can still accommodate those who are stranded while still having rooms for the ones coming.”

In the mean time, Global Travel Media reported Jetstar and Virgin Australia were operating bigger aircraft and adding extra flights to rescue thousands of passengers today. Virgin is expected to fly about 2,000 passengers from Bali while Jetstar plans to operate 18 flights in and out of Bali, which includes 10 additional services.

More exhibitors join 2nd instalment of Travel Revolution 2015

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THE upcoming Travel Revolution 2015 from July 24 to 26 will see 37 outbound travel agencies present at the fair, up from the previous 30 in its debut fair earlier this April.

Kay Swee Pin, president of Singapore Outbound Travel Agents Association (SOTAA) said this three-day fair is targeting a total of 80,000 in visitors and S$100 million (US$74 million) in sales turnover.

The earlier instalment of the fair welcomed 76,000 visitors with an overall sales figure of approximately S$100 million.
Key outbound travel agencies like Chan Brothers Travel, CTC Travel, Dynasty Travel and SA Tours will be present. National tourism organisations from Japan, Taiwan and Korea will be promoting their destinations at the event as well.

Held at Marina Bay Sands Expo Halls D to F, this exhibition spans 17,000m2, with more than 70 exhibitors participating. Admission to the event is free and the show runs from 10.00 to 21.00 over three days.

Oakwood Apartments Colombo arrives in Sri Lanka

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Credit: Oakwood Asia Pacific

OAKWOOD Asia Pacific has marked its expansion into Sri Lanka with the new Oakwood Apartments Colombo, which will be helmed by Tilome Nanayakkara.

Scheduled to open in early 2016, the property will be located in the prime residential area of Colombo 3. The 78 fully furnished and equipped apartments comprises of 12 studio apartments and 66 one-bedroom apartments.

Facilities include a restaurant and bar, swimming pool and fitness centre, and 24-hour hotel service.

Tilome Nanayakkara, the newly appointed general manager of Oakwood Apartments Colombo, joins Oakwood from the Global Towers Hotel in Colombo, where she has been general manager since 2008.

Uni-Orient releases Russia packages with China Eastern Airlines

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PHILIPPINE inbound operator Uni-Orient Travel has partnered with China Eastern Airlines to launch tour packages to Russia.

Wilson Techico, vice president – business and product development of Uni-Orient Travel, told TTG e-Daily that Filipinos are looking for new destinations as they are already used to travelling around Asia.

He added that Uni-Orient has the advantage of knowing the Russian market as it is one of the most aggressive agencies handling Philippine inbound from Russia, replete with Russian staff.

While there are no direct flights between Manila and Moscow, there are currently four airlines serving the route: Aeroflot from its Hong Kong hub, partnering Philippine Airlines from Manila to Hong Kong; Air China, China Southern Airlines and China Eastern Airlines.

Techico teamed up with China Eastern Airlines because, aside from its special rates, the airline has the best air connection offering services from Manila to Shanghai, with the transit flight to Moscow only a few hours’ wait.

Unveiled during the Travel Madness Expo last week, the company’s Russia Series comprises a number of tour packages lasting five to 10 days.

Carlson Rezidor on track with development plans in India with new signing

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Carlson Rezidor on track with development plans in India with new signing
New Delhi, July 13, 2015

CARLSON Rezidor Hotel Group has announced the signing of Radisson Resort Hosur, a new-build hotel with 120 guestrooms and suites located in Tamil Nadu, expected to open in 2018.

This signing reinforces Carlson Rezidor’s position as the largest international hotel operator in India with 117 hotels in operation and under development in the country, the chain said. Its footprint spans 45 cities, including 14 state capitals, and it is on track to meet its target of having 170 hotels in operation and under development in India by 2020.

Situated on 4.9ha of prime land in a region that is popularly known as ‘Little England’, the hotel will offer scenic views of the area and a man-made lake. It is adjacent to Pushpam Ranches, a 22.3ha high-end residential township that is being developed by the Pushpam Group.

Radisson Resort Hosur will be located less than a 20-minute drive away from the Hosur city centre and less than 30 minutes away from Electronic City, one of India’s largest electronic industrial parks. It is also within reach of several industrial and manufacturing hubs, such as areas in Hosur, Attibele, Jigni and Bomasandra.

In terms of amenities, the hotel features large meeting spaces, including a ballroom, meeting rooms, boardrooms and a business centre. Sprawling lawns also offer additional outdoor venue options. Other facilities include a restaurant, a gym and health club, a spa, a salon, an amphitheater, a cricket pitch, badminton and tennis courts, a golf academy and a driving range.

Greek flight bookings plummet as debt crisis worsens

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Credit: ForwardKeys

FLIGHT bookings to Greece have plunged due to the latest developments in the country’s financial crisis.

According to new figures from ForwardKeys, bookings from June 28 to July 7 have fallen 45 per cent for the same period last year. The first big dip was recorded on June 28, the day of the banks closure announcement, and continued to fall in the following week.

Germany and France suffered important drops of 49 per cent and 23 per cent respectively, widely affecting the Greek performance as the two countries carried 23 per cent of the share.

Oliver Jager, co-founder and CEO of ForwardKeys, said: “This is significant because Greece is a favourite holiday destination for both the Germans and the French, and at this point Greece needs tourism more than ever.

“Interestingly, the Chinese are still continuing to make bookings because, anecdotally at least, they perceive the cash crisis as only affecting Greeks.”

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Credit: ForwardKeys

Bookings from the US were down 56 per cent, while the UK and Italy both dropped 51 per cent and France fell 23 per cent.

Despite the financial crisis, Greece is still enjoying a 7.6 per cent year-on-year increase for arrivals.

Since many people book their flights about three months ahead of travel, ForwardKeys’ latest analysis implies that travellers are only now starting to fear Greece’s deteriorating predicament.

Looking forward, there is still no sign of a crisis for Greece’s air bookings. Based on issued bookings until July 7, future arrivals show positive variations for most countries, except Germany, Belgium and Cyprus.

Koryo Tours launches North Korean railway tour package

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Credit: Koryo Tours

BEIJING-BASED Koryo Tours has opened the North Korean tourism market another fraction with the introduction of the first railway journey to traverse the secretive state.

The company’s 11-day trip – billed as an “eastern adventure by rail” – will take foreign tourists from Pyongyang to Mount Myohyang and on to the east and north-east coasts of the country. The journey concludes in the industrial city of Chongjin, almost on the border with Russia.

Travel to this part of North Korea has been tightly restricted in the past and anyone wanting to visit the north-east was previously required to take a special charter flight.

Cities such as Sinpho and Kimchaek are also along the route and are as-yet unexplored by foreign tourists, Koryo Tours said.

The inaugural trip, scheduled for October 2, will cost around US$3,220.

The period of the tour also coincides with Party Foundation Day, one of the most important days on North Korea’s calendar, marking the founding of the Workers’ Party. Participants will be able to watch march-pasts by the military, firework displays and mass dances.

Koryo Tours also states there is a chance to “mingle with the locals” during the celebrations.

Nick Bonner, the British founder of Koryo Tours, said he has high hopes that tourism will have a positive impact on North Korea’s relations with countries and people from outside its borders, adding that he sees the company’s efforts “as a form of diplomacy”.

Macau eases transit visas for mainland Chinese

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MACAU has relaxed entry regulations for transit visitors from mainland China, allowing them to stay up to seven days.

Effective since July 1, mainland passport holders are allowed to enjoy seven instead of five days of visit when transiting Macau, if they did not enter the city in the previous 30 days.

Those who violate the new transit regulation will now be granted two days of stay, up from one, if they enter Macau again on a transit visa within 30 days.

Las Vegas Sands & Sands China’s global chief marketing officer, Dave Horton, welcomed opportunities for guests to stay longer in their properties, especially since “a vast majority” of its patrons hail from mainland China.

Cooper Zhang, manager of CITS Macau, international department, found this new policy positive to inbound travel.

He said: “As a tour company, we don’t benefit much from these transit visitors because they mostly come to gamble. However, the longer they stay, the more money they’ll spend in Macau. This would benefit hotels which suffer low occupancy rate in recent months.”

“Mainland Chinese may feel good about the relaxation but it’s definitely not a main reason to drive them to come more,” said Andy Wu, managing director of Gray Line Tours.

“I personally don’t see a big surge in arrivals, given existing factors like the anti-corruption practice by the Chinese government and the recent stock market slump,” he added.

Meanwhile, it remains to be seen if the revised policy will boost mainland tourist arrivals.

Said a spokesman from the Tourism Research Centre of the Institute for Tourism Studies: “Even if we find a recovery of tourist numbers from the mainland, it may only be the summer holiday effect, rather than an outcome of the policy relaxation. To conclude if it really helps, we need a longer observation period.

Peninsula Yangon, London in design phase

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THE Peninsula Hotels’ two new projects in Yangon and London are in the design phase, with the former expected to open in three years and the latter in five.

The Yangon property is the former headquarters of the Burma Railway Building, an elegant colonial building and one of the most distinctive buildings in Yangon. Plans are to preserve and restore the existing structure and redevelop it into an 80-room Peninsula hotel.

The Peninsula London is being developed on a 1.5-acre site opposite the gardens of Buckingham Palace and overlooking Hyde Park.

Details are still sketchy, with The Peninsula Hotels’ regional vice president and general manager, The Peninsula Hong Kong, Rainy Chan, in Singapore for a media update, saying the group is consolidating the design concepts for the Yangon project and designing the facade for the London hotel, a new-build, which in London requires a lot of approvals at each stage.

On which other destination gaps the group hopes to fill, Chan said: “In terms of global profile, our need was more in Europe, as we didn’t have a presence until The Peninsula Paris opened (in August last year). London will continue to build on our global portfolio.

“So now we have six properties in Asia, three in the US and six in Europe. I wouldn’t say there’s a tremendous gap, rather, a desire or a wish to have a hotel in India eventually. Our chairman (Michael Kadoorie) and his family lived in India before they moved to Asia and they always have a strong emotion tied to India. India and Shanghai were his roots. He waited 15 years for Shanghai.”

She added: “We are selective; all our hotels are owned and managed by us, so it’s a huge investment while commitment of resources is another (factor). We are a small hotel company and we take things slowly. With two projects under our belt, we’re quite busy.”

Singapore-Australia currency parity leads to stronger demand for Down Under

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ENCOURAGED by a weakening Australian dollar, more Singaporeans have made Australia their go-to destination in recent months.

Some of Singapore’s biggest outbound specialists have reported an uptick in bookings for holidays Down Under.

CTC Travel’s vice president of marketing and PR, Sylvia Tan, said the company has observed an increase of approximately 20 per cent in bookings, while Alicia Seah, director of marketing communications, Dynasty Travel, noted a 20-25 per cent rise in “leisure and business travellers during the winter months of May to July 2015”.

“Over the last two weeks, we have observed a rise in last-minute bookings to Australia, departing in end July and August,” said Jane Chang, assistant manager of marketing communications with Chan Brothers Travel.

The agency saw a five to 10 per cent year-on-year increase in bookings for Australia during the recent June school holidays.

Forward bookings for the year-end holidays are expected to shine too.

“This (fall in value of the Australian dollar) will definitely push some forward bookings for the second half of 2015 and the upward trend will continue to surge with greater demand from travellers,” Seah added.

The Australian dollar has fallen about eight per cent against the Singapore dollar since the start of the year and about 17 per cent since July 2015.

By Samuel Ng