JAKARTA — In a sweeping three-day nationwide operation, Indonesia’s Directorate General of Immigration apprehended 220 foreign nationals for suspected immigration violations, highlighting a significant enforcement shift beyond mere tourist overstays and into the complex realm of foreign labor and industrial projects. The operation, Wirawaspada, conducted from December 10-12, 2025, signals a tightening regulatory landscape with direct implications for Bali’s expatriate community and the businesses that employ them.
The crackdown resulted from 2,298 surveillance activities, with the most common violations being misuse of residence permits (92 individuals) and overstaying visas (32 individuals). The nationality with the highest number of offenses was the People’s Republic of China (114 individuals), followed by Nigeria (16) and India (14), according to official reports from the Directorate’s Instagram channel.
A Dual Focus: Urban Oversight and Industrial Scrutiny
While operations in urban centers netted common administrative violations, a parallel and more targeted mission, Operasi Bhumipura Sakti Wirawasti, zeroed in on massive industrial sites. Authorities conducted stringent oversight of 40,778 foreigners at PT IMIP and PT IWIP—major nickel processing hubs—including checks at dedicated ports and airstrips. Data revealed a substantial foreign maritime presence, with 142 vessels carrying 2,785 foreign crew at PT IMIP in September alone.
“The scale of oversight in these industrial zones is unprecedented,” noted a Bali-based legal consultant specializing in corporate compliance, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “It sends a clear message that the ‘business visa’ or ‘limited stay permit’ used for project work is under a powerful microscope. The assumption that remote industrial sites operate with less scrutiny is now obsolete.”
Further operations in Bangka Belitung targeted foreign nationals, primarily from Thailand, working on sand dredging vessels, with companies summoned for clarification on employees working outside their permitted stay.
The Bali Context: A Wake-Up Call for Compliance

For Bali, an island whose economy is deeply intertwined with foreign residents—from digital nomads and restaurateurs to yoga instructors and boutique hotel investors—this nationwide enforcement wave serves as a critical reminder. The distinction between a legitimate working permit (KITAS) and merely holding a tourist or social-cultural visa while engaging in income-generating activity is the primary line in the sand.
“The highest number of violators may be from China and in industrial parks, but the principle applies equally in Seminyak or Ubud,” said Giostanovlatto, founder of Hey Bali. “For the global community here, this isn’t about a crackdown on tourism; it’s about the state asserting control over its labor market and tax base. The era of ambiguous, informal work arrangements for foreigners is being systematically challenged. For legitimate businesses and expats, this is a call to ensure your paperwork is not just in order, but impeccably so.”
Authorities have reiterated a firm stance. “The Directorate General of Immigration is committed to taking strict action against every immigration violation to maintain state sovereignty and order,” the official statement declared, framing enforcement as a matter of national integrity.
The operations underscore a broader trend of regulatory normalization in Indonesia, where formalization and compliance are becoming non-negotiable pillars of doing business and residing long-term. For Bali’s international residents, the message is one of increased accountability: the privilege of living on the Island of the Gods now comes with an unequivocal demand to respect the laws of the nation.
Hey Bali News provides independent analysis on policy and regulatory changes impacting Bali’s international community.
Reported by Ferry Fadly
Written by Hey Bali Newsroom














































