My friend Skippy has been an Australian PR for over 30 years. I think he will NOT become a citizen until his parents who are 90+ years and living on their own in Malaysia, have moved on. He was here in November 2019 to settle care giver issues for them.
The coronavirus emerged and Skippy stuck it out here to ensure his parents were safe. Last Friday Dec 11, he touched down in Tullamarine airport, Melbourne, after being away for 13 months.
Trauma of booking a flight HOME
On 3.12 when flights were still limited, Skippy booked the first available SIA flight to Perth via Singapore (leaving on 15.12), and a connecting flight with Virgin Australia to Melbourne (A$408) after a mandatory quarantine in Perth. The SIA ticket alone cost A$3,500 since only business class was offered and he was desperate. Like many thousands of Aussies stranded overseas, Skippy was concerned the borders would close again, so he continued scanning for earlier direct flights to Melbourne. Thankfully, he received an email from DFAT informing him that Malaysia Airlines had a direct flight on 11.12. Skippy patiently spent days checking the MH website but nothing was listed until 9.12. Without hesitation, he filled in the necessary forms only to be told the seat was already taken. Not prepared to give up, he called Customer Helpline and managed to get his name on the waiting list. On 10.12, he noticed there was availability so he tried again. Lady Luck smiled on him and he got his ticket to Melbourne for A$2,300. Skippy had just 24 hours to pack and say goodbye. With so much uncertainty, he did not dare cancel his original ticket to Perth until he was waiting to board on 11.12. Will he get a refund? Who knows 🤷♂️? The cancellation fee alone for SIA was $800+ with no refund for airport charges. Going home has never been so expensive!
MANDATORY QUARANTINE
Skippy arrived at his hotel via the back entrance. Sorry, with the pandemic, there was no grand front entrance with beaming door man and welcome drink. Instead, he was greeted by a team of Health Dept. staff, doctors, nurses, police and army personnel all in PPE. Scary like out of the movies.
Mandatory quarantine meant no visitors in the room. Guests were allowed outside 3 times daily only to collect meals. No wandering around the corridor and fraternising. Guests have to wait 15-20 seconds after hotel staff knocks, open door, pick up food and shut door. Something akin to solitary confinement in prison! Ahh, no room service available! So each room was provided with cleaning products, rubbish bags, towels, tissues and toilet paper.
Lucky Skippy got a corner room with a view.
By day 6, Skippy had settled into a routine of hopping, oops I mean jogging in his room.
He 🤦♂️ actually made the effort to create a decent indoor jogging track by rearranging the bed and tables 🤦♀️.
QUARANTINE SOPs
Australia has mandatory SOPs - hotels hosting overseas returnees must have a medical team and an enforcement personnel station to check daily on guests’ welfare. Skippy informed them that he had hay fever and meds were delivered to his room free of charge.
Returning home has never been more difficult. Skippy is concerned about the thousands of stranded Australians that will NOT be HOME this Christmas
either due to Australia’s International arrival caps or simply because they cannot afford the exorbitant air fares and quarantine costs.
But for those of you who have secured tickets home, Skippy suggests that you:
😍 check with the airline you are travelling with for any declaration that needs to be completed online to expedite your check-in procedure.
🤩 complete the online Federation and State declarations.
TRAVEL SAFELY EVERY ONE.
Grateful acknowledgement to Skippy, the ghost writer for this post, for his invaluable contribution and pictures.
It been almost year since I been flight, I went to see my son over Christmas 2019.
ReplyDeleteCoffee is on and stay safe
Families have been separated during this pandemic. Let's hope 2021 allows us to travel again and you get to visit your son soon
DeleteI am so glad that Skippy has been able to get back into Australia - and feel (so much) for the thousands who cannot.
ReplyDeleteIt is sad that many will not be home for Christmas and New Year, things can only get better.
DeleteInteresting to know about Skippy !
ReplyDeletemany seats are available in other name is empty. ah coronavirus, when you done :(
ReplyDeletehave a nice weekend, stay safe ya