Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong gave these updates late Wednesday at a reception with Singaporeans in Yangon at Sedona Hotel, which is built by Singapore developer Keppel Land.
These “stopover flights” from Singapore through Yangon or Mandalay would benefit tourists.
“When people come as tourists, they can come to Yangon, stop over for a couple of days, get back onto the next aeroplane, go on to Mandalay and then go home,” PM Lee said, calling it a more attractive network of connections.
The 49 direct flights a week between Singapore and Myanmar are international, with flights to and from Singapore and Mandalay, or Singapore and Yangon.
PM Lee said the Myanmar government is keen to work with Singapore to improve connectivity. Both sides have also been discussing ideas that can improve things for their peoples and business communities, he said. “They listened to me. Some of this will move; some of the others, they will still study.”
A key announcement on Tuesday was visa-free travel between Singapore and Myanmar for 30-day trips by their citizens. It will take effect on December 1.
PM Lee told the 300 Singaporeans at the reception: “I hope when your family members come back and forth, it will be more convenient for them. They won't have to apply for a visa, and you'll keep in touch with home more often.”
The Singaporean community in Myanmar has grown from 150 a decade ago to at least 500 now.
The number looks set to soar as Myanmar is opening up and is “an adventurous place to be in”, PM Lee noted. “Not everything is solved yet, so there is some uncertainty... but that's what it means to be on the frontier. We need Singaporeans to be out there, finding new opportunities and doing well.”
Agreeing, Lim Chong Chong, 38, group chief financial officer in a Myanmar company, told The Straits Times: “There are a lot of jobs and business opportunities in Myanmar for Singaporeans, but many are scared off by their negative impressions of the country.”
He cheered the visa exemption, saying: “It will make life easier, not having to keep going to the embassy to get a visa.”