logo
‘Stress and hassle': Travellers in Bali scramble for flights to S'pore after Indonesia volcano erupts

‘Stress and hassle': Travellers in Bali scramble for flights to S'pore after Indonesia volcano erupts

Straits Times19 hours ago

Travellers waiting near the KLM counter at Changi Airport Terminal 1 on June 18 after their flight to Bali's capital Denpasar was cancelled. ST PHOTO: BRIAN TEO
'Stress and hassle': Travellers in Bali scramble for flights to S'pore after Indonesia volcano erupts
SINGAPORE - Indian national Avic Hal was travelling in Bali the past week, when his trip - quite literally - almost went up in smoke.
Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki, a volcano on the eastern tourist island of Flores, Indonesia, erupted on June 17, causing volcanic ash to rain down on several villages surrounding the volcano, forcing the evacuation of at least one village.
The eruption also caused at least two dozen flight cancellations to and from the Indonesian resort island of Bali on June 18.
'It was really scary, I thought the whole trip would be ruined. I was scared for my health because of the pollution,' Mr Avic told The Straits Times at Changi Airport following his arrival at 11.30am via an AirAsia flight on June 18.
Asked about the situation at the airport in Bali, the 25-year-old business manager described it as 'very chaotic'.
'A lot of people were stranded and they were sitting on the benches because their flights were cancelled,' he said, adding that he will be transiting through Changi before flying back to Mumbai, India.
Mexican student Miguel Angel Gallardo also arrived in Singapore via AirAsia, but unlike Mr Avic, he and his family had to scramble to get on the plane after their 9am Scoot flight to Singapore was cancelled .
Student Miguel Angel Gallardo (second from right) with his family at Changi Airport Terminal 4 on June 18.
ST PHOTO: BRIAN TEO
They were informed of the cancellation only after arriving at the airport in Denpasar in the morning , said the 21-year-old from Texas.
The family then raced to get four tickets on AirAsia's 10.40am flight , but at an additional cost of about US$1,500 (S$1,920) in total.
'It caused a lot of stress and hassle because we didn't know if there were any other available airlines once ours got cancelled,' Mr Gallardo said.
'It's just smoke'
Despite the situation, some travellers told ST that they were unaware of the eruption , while others who knew about it said they were unconcerned as it occurred some distance away from Bali. According to travel website Travel Weekly Asia, Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki is about 800km east of Bali .
Ms Azinam Rizieyana (second from left), 31, and her family waiting at Changi Airport Terminal 3 on June 18. Their original Scoot flight to Bali was cancelled, and they have been trying to secure another flight.
ST PHOTO: BRIAN TEO
French national Lucye Bouclyer arrived at Bali airport early on June 18, as her flight to Singapore was not affected by the eruption.
She said she is not afraid of volcanic eruptions - 'It's just smoke, sometimes flights are cancelled, but they're not too dangerous,' she told ST at Changi Airport .
The unemployed 23-year-old had spent two months in Indonesia , and will be spending three days in Singapore before leaving for Malaysia.
Quinton Posthumus, a 29-year-old from Pretoria, South Africa , said that he had received alerts about the impending eruption two weeks prior, but decided to proceed with his trip as planned .
He and his wife spent five days in Ubud, Bali , and said they 'didn't hear a thing about it from locals our whole trip'.
They did not experience any disruptions, and did not notice any announcements regarding the eruption when boarding their SIA flight to Singapore.
However, they remained worried for their two friends who will still be in Bali for the next three days.
An Indonesian mining consultant living in Singapore who wanted to be known only as A.W. told ST that she had arrived at Bali's airport at 8am for her flight home, which was scheduled for 1pm.
The 35-year-old observed that several flights there after 12pm had been cancelled, and was surprised to find that hers was still scheduled for departure. Amid the chaos, several friends had also checked in on her, asking if she was still flying home to Singapore.
'As Indonesians, we know there are a lot of volcano eruptions in Indonesia, but we trust that the government takes all necessary precautions,' she said.
This is a developing story.
Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Airbus hits US$21 billion orders at Paris Air Show as Boeing focuses on India crash
Airbus hits US$21 billion orders at Paris Air Show as Boeing focuses on India crash

Business Times

time4 hours ago

  • Business Times

Airbus hits US$21 billion orders at Paris Air Show as Boeing focuses on India crash

[PARIS] Airbus secured more aircraft orders on Wednesday, raising its total to US$21 billion at this week's subdued Paris Air Show, while rival Boeing opted not to announce new sales following last week's Air India 787 crash. Airbus firmed up an order for 10 long-haul jets from Taiwan's Starlux Airlines in a boost for the European planemaker after one of its biggest customers, AirAsia, dashed expectations of another grand finale matching its earlier expansion. Airbus won a total of 148 firm orders worth US$14.2 billion including six previous ones disclosed publicly for the time, plus 102 provisional orders worth US$6.7 billion, according to estimated delivery prices from UK-based Cirium Ascend. Delegates had been bracing for a more muted show than usual after Boeing struck huge deals during US President Donald Trump's recent trip to the Middle East. The US jetmaker then scaled back its presence at the show to focus on the probe into last week's deadly crash of an Air India Boeing 787. But Europe's Airbus has been steadily racking up business, and underscored confidence about growing demand by holding out the prospect of higher dividends. It prefaced each show announcement with sympathies for India victims, however. 'It is an air show with a regrettable tragedy that has affected all of us,' Airbus planemaking CEO Christian Scherer told Reuters. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Despite the sombre tone, talk was rife before and during the event at Le Bourget outside Paris that Airbus might seal a major deal with AirAsia to add a final flourish to the gathering. Airline entrepreneur Tony Fernandes, the CEO of AirAsia owner Capital A Group, told Reuters that it was in talks to buy 50 to 70 A321XLR jetliners, and 100 A220s or competing E2 regional jets from Brazil's Embraer. But he played down the chances of a deal in Paris, saying the first priority was to complete the group's restructuring. 'We're still doing a lot of work with Airbus and other (manufacturers) .... I think we'll look to do something imminently, in the next 1-3 months,' he said in an interview. Two industry sources said Airbus had made an 'aggressive' offer to boost A220 orders and win a launch customer for a new 160-seat version but that talks stalled over financing. Another said it would be natural to resume discussions around July when the company expects to exit its financial troubles. 'Different show' Embraer said on Wednesday it had secured an order for 60 of its E175 regional jets from SkyWest Airlines, which also agreed purchase rights for a further 50 of the aircraft. Airbus announced an order for two A350 freighters from logistics company MNG Airlines, and EgyptAir was unveiled as the previously-undisclosed buyer of six A350-900 long-haul jets. Planemakers have been struggling to keep up with demand for new, more fuel-efficient aircraft since the end of pandemic-era travel restrictions, with supply chain problems - particularly with engines - delaying some deliveries. Airbus said on Wednesday, however, that since early 2025 it had experienced 40 per cent fewer disruptions caused by delayed components at its production facilities. 'It has been a very different air show from those we have seen in the past, which have tended to be wall-to-wall aircraft orders,' Agency Partners analyst Sash Tusa said. 'Civil orders have been affected by .... Boeing being very careful about how they announce or don't announce things,' he said. In another shift, he said, Airbus focused on securing public backing for planes that could benefit from more orders like the A220, rather than its heavily sold-out A320neo family. On the defence side of the show, US drone maker Anduril and Germany's Rheinmetall said they would partner to build aerial drones for European markets, in a sign of Europe leveraging US technology to boost military capabilities. REUTERS

Indonesia volcano eruption forces flight cancellations, evacuations
Indonesia volcano eruption forces flight cancellations, evacuations

CNA

time9 hours ago

  • CNA

Indonesia volcano eruption forces flight cancellations, evacuations

SIKKA: Dozens of flights were cancelled and evacuations ordered after Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki in eastern Indonesia erupted, sending a column of ash 10 kilometres into the sky, authorities said on Wednesday (Jun 18). The 1,584-metre volcano on Flores island erupted on Tuesday, prompting officials to raise its alert level to the highest on a four-tier scale. 'Due to volcano activity of Lewotobi Laki-Laki in East Nusa Tenggara, several flights at I Gusti Ngurah Rai Airport are cancelled,' airport operator Angkasa Pura Indonesia said in a statement. Flights operated by Jetstar and Virgin Australia, along with services by Air India, Tigerair, Juneyao Airlines and Air New Zealand, were affected, according to the Bali international airport website. Jetstar confirmed it had delayed flights to and from Bali, with expectations that the ash cloud would clear by Wednesday evening. AirAsia also said it had cancelled or rescheduled flights to Bali, Lombok and Labuan Bajo, and was assisting affected passengers. A total of 32 domestic and international flights at Bali's Ngurah Rai airport were cancelled. The airport remained open, with a customer service agent telling AFP, 'It depends on the route and also the airline.' Nearby, Fransiskus Xaverius Seda Airport in Maumere was closed until Thursday morning. Two additional local airports on Flores were also temporarily shut, Indonesia's transport ministry said. The eruption disrupted travel for approximately 14,000 passengers. TREMORS CONTINUE, EVACUATIONS UNDERWAY Volcanic ash fell on nearby villages, forcing the evacuation of at least one on Tuesday night, according to Indonesia's disaster mitigation agency. Ongoing tremors and eruptions were still being detected on Wednesday, spokesperson Abdul Muhari said. 'No less than 450 families from affected villages… have settled in temporary housing equipped with electricity and clean water facilities,' he said. The geology agency urged residents and tourists to remain at least seven kilometres away from the crater and warned of possible lahar flows, fast-moving volcanic mudflows — if rain falls in the area. There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage. Mount Lewotobi Laki-Laki, meaning 'man' in Indonesian, is paired with a neighbouring peak, Lewotobi Perempuan ('woman'). In November, the volcano erupted repeatedly, killing nine people, disrupting international flights to Bali and displacing thousands. Indonesia, an archipelago of more than 17,000 islands, sits on the Pacific 'Ring of Fire' and is prone to frequent volcanic and seismic activity.

As Iran-Israel hostilities mount, foreigners left scrambling to get out of harm's way
As Iran-Israel hostilities mount, foreigners left scrambling to get out of harm's way

Straits Times

time12 hours ago

  • Straits Times

As Iran-Israel hostilities mount, foreigners left scrambling to get out of harm's way

As Iran-Israel hostilities mount, foreigners left scrambling to get out of harm's way – Mountaineer Falguni De's solo expedition to Asia's highest volcanic summit Mount Damavand in Iran has turned into a battle for survival, as the 40-year-old tries to find a way to leave the country now battered by Israel's missile strikes. A blizzard had forced him to descend from the summit on June 10. Returning to the capital Tehran, he was shocked to find a bombed city and the Iranian airspace closed. Stuck in a transit office in the Iranian town of Astara that borders Azerbaijan, Dr De told The Straits Times over a patchy WhatsApp phone call that he is desperate to get back home to his parents, wife and daughter, but is stuck in a web of cross-border bureaucracy. 'I am being told that Azerbaijan requires a special migration code to let me cross the border. It will take 15 days for that to be processed,' said the geography professor from Kolkata after a sleepless week and now fast running out of cash. 'I am surrounded by people from a lot of countries. Everyone is trying to get home,' he said in one of several WhatsApp voice messages, against a backdrop of panicked voices and what appeared to be prayers. With Israel-Iran hostilities escalating into a second week, the embassies of China and India – Asia's two most populous nations, each with many citizens in the Islamic Republic – are among several racing to evacuate their nationals, especially from Tehran. Thousands of tourists, pilgrims, students and businessmen are trying to escape, but with the Iranian airspace shut, many are turning to land ports with neighbouring countries like Armenia, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan. China has evacuated 791 of its citizens from Iran, with more than 1,000 others in the process of leaving, said foreign ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun in a press briefing on June 18. Chinese embassies and consulates in neighbouring Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan have dispatched teams to assist Chinese citizens with customs clearance at border crossings, as well as with subsequent accommodation and transit back to China. Dr De left for Astara by road after India's Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) advised its nationals on June 16 to evacuate Tehran, and for those with access to private transportation to move to safer locations. The ministry said it had facilitated many Indian students leaving Iran via Armenia, and that it remains 'continuously in touch with the community with a view to extending all feasible assistance'. Mr Nasir Khuehami, national convenor of the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association, said: 'When the conflict began in Iran, we started getting calls from fearful students and terrified parents. So we wrote to the MEA requesting help to evacuate people.' Around 250 Indian students were moved from Tehran to safer places before 'the Indian government took some of them by bus to Armenia, which took 15 hours'. At noon on June 18, at least 110 students of Urmia Medical University, including 90 from the Kashmir valley, boarded a flight from Yerevan to Mumbai. Analysts said India might face diplomatic challenges in its evacuation operations. While it had good relations with Armenia, Iraq and Turkmenistan, New Delhi does not have amicable ties with other countries bordering Iran – Turkey, Azerbaijan and Pakistan in particular – after May's India-Pakistan cross-border firing. Ankara and Baku were seen as supporting Islamabad in this conflict. In Israel's first round of attacks on June 13, some 200 fighter jets are said to have targeted dozens of military and nuclear targets across Iran, including its main nuclear facility in Natanz. These attacks triggered Iranian retaliation on Israel, with the crisis threatening to spiral as the United States reportedly mulls direct involvement in strikes on Iran. China President Xi Jinping, in his first public comments on the conflict, said on June 17 that China is 'deeply worried' about Israel's military operation against Iran, adding that China opposes any actions that infringe upon the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of other countries. Mr Xi, who spoke on the sidelines of a summit with five Central Asian nations in Kazakhstan's capital Astana, said: 'All parties should work to de-escalate the conflict as soon as possible and prevent the situation from worsening further.' A Chinese citizen who runs a hotel in Tehran and has lived there for more than 10 years told The Global Times, a Chinese media outlet, that over 100 Chinese people left his hotel on four buses on June 16, headed for Azerbaijan. Others said they had wanted to wait to see how the situation developed, but changed their minds after seeing people leaving Iran in droves. A Chinese woman, who has been travelling alone in the Middle East region since May 2025, posted on social media platform Xiaohongshu that she decided on June 15 to buy a bus ticket to flee Tehran, instead of continuing to Isfahan in Iran as she had originally planned. The woman, whose bio said she was from China's Guangdong province, said that she and her fellow passengers were startled by a large explosion as their bus left Iran. She only reached the Iran-Turkey border about 48 hours later on June 17 and is now in Van, Turkey. 'After two days of constant travelling, my mindset remains positive as it's important to stay optimistic and not panic. There are always more solutions than problems,' she wrote. Another Chinese woman from Henan province, vlogged her car journey out of Tehran with her Iranian husband and young daughter. 'My husband said he and his father can die here, but my daughter and I should not die in this land, so we quickly packed up to leave in case the borders close,' she said in a calm voiceover in Mandarin, as she documented their 13-hour-long drive towards the Iran-Turkey border and their eventual settlement in Turkey. As tens of thousands of foreigners await evacuation, many are posting on social media and talking to journalists in the hope of getting their messages across to their governments. 'The situation here is getting intense. So far we are safe,' media professional and teacher Abbas Muzaffar texted ST over WhatsApp from Qom in north central Iran, where he and his 83-year-old mother were stuck. They were in Iran with 90 others from Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, for a pilgrimage. Despite the unreliable internet connectivity, Mr Muzaffar, 48, kept in touch with friends, family and journalists. As ST tried to call him on June 18, he sent a rushed voice message: 'I have just received a frantic last minute phone call from the embassy to board a bus for Mashhad (international airport in Iran). So me, and my old mother, we have boarded the bus.' 'We are on the way. Battery is dying… There is a long way to go.' Rohini Mohan is The Straits Times' India Correspondent based in Bengaluru. Michelle Ng is The Straits Times' China Correspondent based in Beijing. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store