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Almost home for Whiskey

Whiskey has had a long “holiday” in Brunei, since October I think. About 3 months ago, it was confirmed that PetAir Malaysia has secured a place for her at PEQ Melbourne.

She was scheduled to fly to Melbourne on the 13 May. Our agent wasn’t happy with the date as that is the start of Hari Raya celebration, New Year celebration for our Muslim friends. Nothing much would be operational in Brunei during that holiday period. We had to contact PEQ and requested for an earlier date, which we did get, 12 May.

Yesterday, Bryn, Whiskey’s host parent showered her, making sure she is clean and pretty. This morning, she sent us a photo of Whiskey in her crate, ready to fly back to Australia. We were also told that we will receive an update once Whiskey has landed. The cost of her stay at PEQ will be sorted by the agent at the end of her 10 days.

We have also organised a flight for her from Melbourne to Brisbane. We will be picking her up at Brisbane airport on the 22nd. We are really excited about it and hoping that she will get along well with the other dogs.

Other dogs? Yes, we are staying with my parents after we left Malaysia. We haven’t found our own place yet and that would be another story in the near future. My parents have 3 dogs, unfortunately, 2 of them are quite territorial. We will be introducing her to all three one at a time. Making sure that when we go to work, all of them would get along well. No fights and they would not invade her space either.

Hope Whiskey will be okay during her 10 days at PEQ. We have heard stories from a Facebook group about pets coming out from the facility with minor injuries/infections or pets who had throuble adjusting to the dry food they got given. So far, everything has been great, praying that it will continue to be great on her last quarantine.

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What a let down

Today, the article on Tom Hanks visiting Australia for his movie, avoiding the mandatory 14 days quarantine gained attention again in one of the Aussie expat Facebook group. It really annoys the living day lights out of me. This is the actor who had Corona virus already and has been given permission to enter Australia despite the international arrival cap that prevented many of us from returning to the land we call home.

A lot of Australian expats are struggling to go home. This week, I read an article on how DFAT employees in Canberra are accused of booking 2 to 3 tickets (paid in full) for overseas DFAT workers. You can read the full article here. It might not be true, but no one is denying it and it makes the current government looks like they are as competent as my Year 3 students. No wait, my Year 3 students can do what is expected of them.

When the Prime Minister issued advice, recommending Aussie expats to come home, it also stated that the national carrier (Qantas) will maintain its operation on both international and domestic routes. Not the case! Australians overseas have to rely on Emirates, Qatar, China Airlines, Malaysia Airlines, Singapore Air and Cathay Pacific to take them home.

A lot disappointment is also directed towards the Australian consular abroad. I emailed them to ask for assistance regarding my expired work visa and they sent me links that provided me with little information regarding my situation. In hindsight, they probably have very little knowledge of what to do despite their ongoing discussions about changes that affect foreigners in Malaysia.

If one day, the government released a statement saying “we got through Covid-19 together” or “humanity helped us overcome the hardship caused by the pandemic” I call bullshit on that. From where I am sitting right now, the government has done very little to help Aussie expats. If anything, they have done really well in dividing the nation. Those who believes that Aussie expats should stay out of Australia and those who want them to come home.

Not all of us are living the life of Tom Hanks. I was going to come home and retire from living abroad. Sadly, that is not going to happen anytime soon. My husband and I can’t continue to survive on what savings we have while hoping that the ticket we have bought is the one that will take us home. I have accepted that reality and it is a downer.

I am not looking forward to my next call with my parents. They were so excited that we are finally going to start living in Australia. But, we need to do what we need to do to survive. For us, this is it. Taking another job offer until the day we can come home without worrying whether or not we made the cap.