TTG Asia
Asia/Singapore Monday, 13th April 2026
Page 718

Indonesia simplifies visa tariff and procedures

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From May 16, Indonesia’s single-entry visa will be priced at 1.5 million rupiah (US$104), including a service fee of 200,000 rupiah. It was previously US$50 plus a service fee, but payable in rupiah according to the current exchange rate.

The single-entry visa tariff is valid for 60 days, and can be extended for another 60 days at a cost of two million rupiah, according to Achmad Nur Saleh, spokesperson of the Directorate General of Immigration.

Indonesia simplifies visa tariff and procedures

Achmad added that applicants can pay for visas using an electronic billing code, through ATM or internet banking, and will no longer need to manually transfer through a bank teller the way it was before.

Tariff for Visa on Arrival remains at 500,000 rupiah.

Hellen Sarita de Lima, coordinator of Welcome Yacht Community, welcomed the simplified policy and was optimistic that this would increase the number of international yachters arriving in Indonesia.

She explained that for sailors and yachters, the new policy of 60 days, plus the simpler process, will allow them to cruise and linger longer in the destination.

Paul Talo, director of Floressa Tours, is confident that the new regulation will attract more special interest and adventure tourists as the easy visa extension means they can vacation longer without having to exit the country.

Talo urged the government to ensure the new regulation is conveyed clearly to the travel trade, which deals with international partners and clients, so as to avoid any confusion.

Hilton Singapore Orchard

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Hilton’s new hotel in Singapore earned many news headlines in the lead up to and during its opening – it is the company’s largest hotel in Asia-Pacific and it opened with brisk business, accommodating all players and entourage of the high-profile HSBC Women’s World Championship LPGA Tour.

I was among those who ran said headlines in March, and I finally got a taste of the Hilton hospitality and unique guest experiences that general manager Cedric Nubul waxed very proudly during our earlier interviews.

Location
The new Hilton Singapore Orchard is hard to miss – towering high in a prime section of the buzzing Orchard Road shopping belt. It sits within walking distance of a convenient rapid train line that takes passengers to the City Hall and Raffles Place business districts in around 10 minutes.

Inside, the hotel is also proving to be a formidable competitor on the accommodation, dining and events front, satisfying both leisure and business travellers.

Rooms
Hilton Singapore Orchard takes in a whopping 1,080 rooms – all are energy-efficient, thanks to in-room motion, air-conditioning and light sensor technology. Instead of plastic key cards, the hotel uses wooden ones, with a digital key via the guest’s own smartphone as an even more environmentally-conscious alternative.

The hotel also relies on a custom-built filtration plant that purifies water and ‘bottle’ them into handy paper cartons on site, enabling the elimination of single-use plastic water bottles and carbon footprint.

Room interiors are ageless and modern, with the use of classic tones and textures such as black, white and grey with wood grains and matte-finished metals. Splashes of mauve bring a desirable softness to the décor.

The family suite, where I was accommodated with my husband and seven-year-old firstborn, is spacious and bright, and comes with a generous-sized bathroom where there are both a deep soaking bath and a rain shower. My boy was given a welcome amenity pack, comprising fluffy bedroom slippers for tiny feet and a kiddy dental hygiene set.

It is the perfect size for travelling families, as it can sleep two adults and two little ones, with plenty of space for playful tumbles.

For larger families, the hotel offers the convenience of 294 connecting rooms that can be instantly confirmed at the time of reservation.

F&B
The dining scene is an exciting one at the hotel. There are five dining destinations – Chatterbox and two-Michelin-starred Shisen Hanten by Chen Kentaro are renowned, while three others are new.

Osteria Mozza by celebrated chef Nancy Silverton has made the hotel home, but it was still putting on final touches during my stay. It was previously located at Marina Bay Sands, sited across the Sands Theatre. Now in the heart of Orchard Road, fans of Osteria Mozza can easily access their favourite Italian comfort fare.

Estate all-day dining restaurant on the lobby level is new and visually stunning. Sporting a luxurious colonial estate vibe, the massive venue comes with numerous botanical-inspired artworks, gold accents and clever use of mirrors to project a cavernous depth. Beautifully-furnished seating sections stretch across a large part of the lobby, granting capacity for 360 diners at once. While the décor feeds Instagram-hungry guests, multiple buffet stations serving up international dishes placate empty bellies.

We were spoiled for choice at dinner, but were particularly smitten with the nicely-charred and juicy wagyu koftas as well as quality selection of desserts that include bite-sized Hilton cheesecakes.

The third new dining concept is Ginger.Lily, an elegant space to see and be seen. Located on the lobby level, Ginger.Lily is a tea lounge in the day and cocktail enclave at night. The hotel’s botanical-inspired interiors carry through here, with the menu offering up botanical-infused teas and craft cocktails inspired by native herbs, flowers, and spices.

At Ginger.Lily, we enjoyed a lazy Orchard Trail Afternoon Tea, which comes with a set of delicate sweets and hot, savoury bites, presented in a pretty pink tiered box. Guests can also pick from 10 premium tea varieties, specially curated for Ginger.Lily. Halia & Poached Pear was invigorating, while the Sang Nila’s Lion C-Tea was fragrant and soothing.

Facilities
There are gyms in the hotel, one in the Mandarin Wing and another in the Orchard Wing. The latter has yet to open, as refurbishment work is still being carried out in the Orchard Wing.

The Mandarin Wing gym is large and well equipped with various machines, a good match for the hotel’s large room inventory.

In comparison, the pool is small for a hotel of more than 1,000 rooms. Interestingly, it was never too crowded during our stay across Friday and Saturday. We even had the entire pool to ourselves on Saturday morning.

For business and social events, the hotel packs in more than 2,400m2 of function space, including a Grand Ballroom that has capacity for 900 guests.

Service
This is my favourite part during my short stay at the hotel. Although we were made to wait 2.5 hours for our room due to housekeeping backlog, the staff packed us off to the Executive Lounge where we could wait in comfort while snacking on fruits, sandwiches and scones. We were also offered the option of taking a dip in the pool while waiting for our room to be prepared.

Throughout our stay, we chatted with the staff, who were just excited to be welcoming guests. We spoke about the busy dinner crowd, the long-awaited return of tourism, and their recommended favourites on the buffet line or menu.

Hotel manager Bobby Shankar was a frequent fixture in the lobby, and he struck up conversations with my shy firstborn. They first met at check-in on Friday and chatted about Minecraft. Bobby recommended that my boy try French toasts and hot chocolate for breakfast at Estate the next day. On Saturday morning, he bumped into us at Estate and circled back minutes later with two piping hot slices of French toasts just for my boy. They encountered each other several times throughout our stay, and Bobby always stopped for a short chat.

I appreciated how he – and so many others on the service line – made my boy feel like a valued guest, and not just an accompanying little one.

Number of rooms: 1,080

Contact details
Tel: +65 6737 4411
Website: www.hilton.com/en/hotels/sinorhi-hilton-singapore-orchard/

Oceania Cruises offers up new discovery excursions

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Oceania Cruises has introduced discovery tours – Go Local, Culinary and Wellness – that are designed to embed travellers in the lives and homes of local families for an authentic taste of the different communities’ ways of life.

For Go Local Discovery Tours, experience a taste of village life in Dubrovnik, Croatia with The Panoramic Dubrovnik, Village Life & Wine excursion, which showcases time-honoured techniques in a family’s wine cellar and olive press room, followed by a chance to share juicy local figs and brandy together.

Oceania Cruises introduces new discovery tours

Or get up close to locals making a living with The Life on the River excursion in Nha Trang, Vietnam. Discover how expert craftsmen build wooden fishing boats while cruising past villages, farms and rice paddies.

The Culinary Discovery Tours lets visitors unearth new tastes and traditions, such as the Shop for Dinner and Set the Table in Buenos Aires, Argentina – a fun and engaging guided excursion that begins with foraging at the local market for the best daily cuts or catch before retiring to enjoy dinner at a home setting.

The Wellness Discovery Tours immerse travellers in the unique natural customs of local communities. The Yagna Encounter and Mumbai’s Ancient Temple Complex in Mumbai, India, includes a Hindu prayer ritual and a visit to a sacred healing water tank. The more adventurous can join The Unusual and Non-Touristy Valencia by Bike in Valencia, Spain. This involves a two-wheel tour through local neighbourhoods, along beaches and past farmhouses and fields, with a break for a paella lunch and a seaside promenade.

More information on other discovery tours can be found here.

WTTC launches hotel sustainability initiative

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The WTTC has initiated Hotel Sustainability Basics – a globally recognised and coordinated set of criteria that all hotels should implement as a minimum to drive responsible travel and tourism.

The programme highlights 12 actions fundamental to hotel sustainability and aims to help the industry improve its environmental impact by providing every hotel a starting point on their sustainability journey.

WTTC’s Hotel Sustainability Basics aims to help the industry improve its environmental impact

The initiative has already gained support from major hotel groups such as Jin Jiang International, Radisson Hotel Group and Accor, as well as key hotel associations around the world like the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association, the Hotel Association of India, Huazhu Hotels Group, and many more.

WTTC urges the sector to seek constant improvements beyond the 12 basic criteria so that every hotel can move on to more advanced frameworks and greater sustainability.

Julia Simpson, WTTC president & CEO, said: “We are launching the Hotel Sustainability Basics to ensure no hotel, however small, is left behind in the drive to introduce a basis sustainability measures within a minimum level the next three years.

“Sustainability is non-negotiable but not every small hotel has access to the science on how to make a difference. This gives everyone access to a global standard and provides consumers to travel with conference.”

WTTC has collaborated with leading global brands and industry associations to develop the criteria, which includes actions to measure and reduce energy use, measure and reduce water use, identify and reduce waste, and measure and reduce carbon emissions. It also includes a linen reuse programme, use of green cleaning products, elimination of single-use plastic items, implementation of bulk amenity dispensers, and measures to benefit local communities.

Wolfgang M Neumann, Sustainable Hospitality Alliance chair, said: “Every industry must do its part to ensure the future of our planet and its people. While many companies are taking great strides and leading the way, others are only now taking their first steps.

“This initiative acts as a stepping stone to the Sustainable Hospitality Alliance’s Pathway to Net Positive Hospitality, which will enable every hotel to take a strategic and progressive approach to achieving a positive environmental impact, whatever their starting point.”

Hotel groups, brands, operators and owners can also become WTTC recognised supporters by endorsing the initiative and completing the Green Lodging Trends Survey to benchmark their performance and keep track of progress.

Indonesia’s Pelita Air expands into scheduled services

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Pelita Air, Indonesia’s state-owned chartered airline company, will begin scheduled operations on April 28 with a fleet of two Airbus A320s that were delivered on April 11.

To make the most of Indonesia’s peak holiday season of Lebaran (Eid al Fitr), which stretches from April 29 to May 6, the airline will operate the busy trunk routes of Jakarta-Makassar and Jakarta-Bali.

Pelita Air will begin scheduled operations on April 28

Muhammad Fauzani, acting president director of Pelita Air, said in a statement that the new fleet represents the airline’s readiness to serve regular flights.

Pelita Air also intends to serve other popular business and tourist cities of Yogyakarta, Surabaya, Medan, and Banjarmasin.

Bambang Sugiono, director of marketing and overseas promotion of Bali-based RD Tours, welcomes the airline’s entry into scheduled air services, as additional seat capacity will only facilitate domestic travel to Bali, which is on the rise ever since Indonesia eased travel restrictions.

Bambang said Pelita Air’s “timing is right”, as the school holidays as well as the European summer travel season are round the corner in July and August.

“European travellers transiting in Jakarta, such as those flying with Qatar Airways, can take Pelita Air to Bali,” he projected.

Sebastian Ng, managing director of Incito Vacations, expects Pelita Air’s scheduled flights to expand flight options and aid travel recovery.

He said Pelita Air’s services to Makassar is a good choice, as the destination is popular with both leisure and business travellers and is recognised as a business hub between the western and eastern parts of Indonesia.

Regal Hotels Group makes ESG move into metaverse

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The Sandbox metaverse is set to see the rise of MetaGreen, an environmental, social, and governance (ESG)-themed estate developed by Regal Hotels Group to promote eco-friendly choices and foster a sustainable community that supports a circular economy.

Set within Mega City 2, MetaGreen will be the game’s first green metropolis and represent an ecosystem that will harness blockchain, tokenisation, GameFi, play-to-earn and Non-Fungible Token (NFT). MetaGreen is scheduled for completion by October 2022.

MetaGreen will be The Sandbox’s first green metropolis

The estate, made up of a group of individual lands merged into a larger parcel, is said to be the first sustainability-themed metropolis in The Sandbox. At present, there are six uniquely interactive districts that make up the MetaGreen virtual estate: Regal Hotels’ green hotel & residence, MetaGreen Convention Center, MetaGreen Mall, Art Park, MetaGreen Academy, and virtual eco-travel.

Regal Hotels Group’s vice-chairman and managing director Poman Lo said: “Sustainability and technology have long been at the heart of our group’s DNA and passionately infused in our corporate initiatives and strategic investments. Web3 and metaverse technologies will not only disrupt every facet of our daily lives, but also empower socially inclusive and environmentally sustainable impact in the world. Accelerating the transition to carbon net zero, MetaGreen is a collaborative ecosystem of like-minded partners co-creating a progressive green movement to inspire decarbonisation and behavioural changes in the consumer and business communities.”

The group’s investment in The Sandbox puts the brand among the first hotel groups in the world to take a bold and leading role in the next iteration of the Internet. As part of the group’s own pledge, MetaGreen has already purchased more than double the verified carbon credits necessary to reverse its limited Ethereum emissions.

MetaGreen represents the group’s three distinguishing strengths: focus on customer-centric innovation to elevate guest experiences, commitment to sustainability and purpose-driven business initiatives, and a well-demonstrated collaborative network.

Regal Hotels Group sees approximately two thirds of Hong Kong’s population, a user base of five million, as potential MetaGreen netizens.

WTTC pushes for single health certificate in Asia

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WTTC is in discussion with Asia-Pacific tourism ministers to establish a simple digital travel certificate within the region, similar to the EU Digital Covid Certificate or Green Pass, to enable a seamless journey.

WTTC president and CEO Julia Simpson noted that there are currently different systems within Asia-Pacific while across the world there are four, in Australia, China, India and the US.

WTTC aims for a simple digital travel certificate within the region to enable a seamless journey

Looking to coordinate at a ministerial level within Asia-Pacific, Simpson said: “This is the responsibility of governments but at the WTTC, we are really pushing them hard to do this.”

While it may be difficult for the four main systems to adapt to each other’s, Simpson said governments could adopt a “platform that interphases between the four main systems”.

“If we are to survive another pandemic, we need to fully integrate a traveller’s health status into their digital travel documents. A good example is the EU Green Travel Pass that has now been adopted by 62 countries. Let us find a single system for the world,” she said.

She added: “If the pandemic has one beneficial effect on travel and tourism, it is that ministers globally have finally understood the real economic value that travel and tourism brings to them and particularly to the livelihoods of the people that live in their country.”

Regarding vaccination progress, Simpson said there should be “complete interoperability” between vaccines accepted by a government and vaccines recognised by the WHO.

“There are obviously some countries that only accept their (own) vaccines but that is much rarer now,” she said.

WTTC is working on Covax, the United Nations system for distributing vaccinations globally, where members have donated money and helped with supply shipment. WTTC has also had major successes in arguing for the licensing ability of different vaccines to enable production in poor countries to bypass shipment.

Entry quarantine dampens Hong Kong’s tourism recovery potential

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While Hong Kong will permit entry for non-residents from May 1, ending a lengthy 25-month suspension of overseas arrivals since March 25, 2020, travel and tourism professionals in the destination say the retention of a mandatory seven-day quarantine for arriving travellers will hamper recovery potential.

Jennifer Cronin, president, Wharf Hotels, told TTG Asia that while the decision was a positive step in the right direction, “it is not anywhere near enough to restart arrivals in any significant numbers”.

Although non-residents may enter Hong Kong, they still have to quarantine for seven days

She noted that Hong Kong’s ongoing mandatory quarantine in a world that is opening up with greater ease will not place the destination on the bucket list of business and leisure travellers.

“There is no question (that the reopening of borders for non-residents) is lessening the burden for Hong Kong and expat families to reconnect from a cost and time perspective, but until (mandatory quarantine) is removed completely, Hong Kong will continue to lag behind our Asian counterparts,” Cronin added.

Offering a more positive view, China Travel Service (Hong Kong), chairman and lawmaker for tourism, Perry Yiu, said Hong Kong’s easing measures have benefitted business travel, “as many expatriates or businessmen are able to return now and handle urgent business”.

However, Arrow Travel’s managing director, Tommy Tam, warned that Hong Kong’s limited number of Designated Quarantine Hotels (DQHs) would be an additional obstacle to Hong Kong’s tourism recovery. Even if travellers were keen to visit Hong Kong, they would have to compete for DHQ rooms with the wave of returning overseas students home bound for their summer holidays from May to July.

“It will not be easy (for travellers) to book (a DQH),” he opined.

Hong Kong has been expanding its number of quarantine hotels to cope with returning Hong Kong residents and arriving foreign domestic helpers. Royal Pacific Hotel, The Kowloon Hotel, and Cordis, Hong Kong were recently converted to DQHs, injecting some 2,000 rooms to the current supply in mid-April.

From May 1, four hotels that are currently used to quarantine foreign domestic helpers will begin to also accept returning Hong Kong residents from places other than China and Macau. They are Courtyard by Marriott Hong Kong Sha Tin, iclub Ma Tau Wai Hotel, O’Hotel, and Rambler Garden Hotel. They will boost the inventory with 1,600 rooms, bringing the total quarantine room inventory to over 14,000 rooms across 45 DQHs.

Indian travel agent convention postpones Sri Lanka gathering

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Continued political unrest and pressures of an economic crisis in Sri Lanka have forced the Travel Agent Association India (TAAI) to postpone its 66th convention and exhibition in the destination to July.

The event, jointly organised by state-owned Sri Lankan Tourism Promotion Bureau and the Sri Lanka Association of Inbound Tour Operators, was supposed to be held in Sri Lanka from April 19 to 22.

TAAI convention postpones Sri Lanka gathering (Photo: SLSK Photography)

Imran Hassan, managing director of CDC Events & Travels, one of the local organisers of the event, said exact dates are still being decided.

Sri Lanka has plunged to its worst-ever economic and political crisis over the past few months. 

Protests held outside the President’s office in capital city Colombo has been ongoing for the past 16 days.

The TAAI event, which is expected to be attended by more than 500 industry professionals from India, would have been one of the largest foreign events in Sri Lanka since the pandemic and travel freeze.

Jyoti Mayal, president of TAAI, was quoted in India news report that public interest in the exhibition programme has been “great”, with more than 500 registrants.

India is Sri Lanka’s biggest tourism source market this year, followed by Russia and the UK.

Summer heats up in Koh Samui with jazz festival

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From June 7 to 12, Koh Samui will host the Samui Summer Jazz 2022 – a six-night programme at the island’s top resorts and clubs to showcase international jazz and world music artists from Thailand, the Netherlands and the US.

Presented by SKÅL International Koh Samui and sponsored by Imagine Samui in collaboration with Sisters on Samui foundation, the festival returns to Koh Samui after eight years.

Samui Summer Jazz festival returns to Koh Samui after eight years

Organised in collaboration with the Amersfoort Jazz Festival (Netherlands) and linked to JazzNL of the Netherlands and the World Jazz Network, the concerts will be held over six nights at various venues: Centara Reserve Samui, U Samui, SEEN Beach Club Samui, SALA Samui Chaweng Beach, Santiburi Koh Samui, and Melia Koh Samui.

Each concert will feature two 50-minute sets, with the hosting venue providing cocktails, or cocktails and dinner as a package for ticketholders. Hotel-stay packages are also available.

Visit www.samuisummerjazz.com for more information.