Planning
your Trip:
The
Best of Bali
Market
– silver jewellery, elaborate statues of Hindu
gods, bright – coloured mobiles, penis – shaped wood carvings,
bushy – haired figures seving as CD – holders – the list is endless.

This
buoyant ind ustry, mostly home-based, swallows a lot manual labour.
With so many people absorbed in tourism and trade, the famed rice
fields of south Bali are often cultivated by families coming from
economically – depressed areas of Bali , Java, and Lombok . They
can be seen camping in makeshit huts along the fields during harvest
season. Tourism also absorbs a lot of workers from outside. And
many of he hands carving crafts around Ubud – often belonging
to children – come from the poorest village of Karangasem .
The drop
in tourists arrivals following the Kuta bombing in 2002, reinforced
by the SARS epidemic and a general climate of insecurity, has
deeply affected the island, especially in the south. Many Bali
nese think that this should be an occasion to work on the problems
that plague the tourist areas – overpopulation, landscapes degraded
by the anarchic construction of shopping mals, and growing water
shortages. One of the most pressing issues is the lack of waste
management sending tons of plastic garbage onto the beaches during
the rainy season.
But investing
in environmental management when income has dropped proves difficult.
Meanwhile, the government and the tourism industry try to replace
missing Europeans with tourists from closer destinations in Asia
– although they tend to stay for shorter periods and spend less
money. If the tourism pie fails to grow back, many fear reprisals
of Balinese against migrants in a general context of increasing
ethnic conflicts in Indonesia . As they have done before, the
Balinese will have to draw on the strength of their culture and
their sense of pride and ind ependence to find ways out of these
challenges.
the
beach resorts
newly
independent republic
problems
that plague
everyone
seem devoted