HEY BALI – Bali has seen its share of foolish tourist stunts. But jumping off a cliff on a rented motorcycle? That is a new low.
On Thursday, April 2, 2026, immigration authorities at Ngurah Rai Airport formally deported a 31-year-old Belgian citizen identified only by the initials SD. His crime was not theft, not assault, not drugs. It was something arguably more emblematic of a certain kind of Bali visitor: reckless, entitled, and documented for the world to see.
The video, which went viral across Instagram, showed SD launching himself and a motorcycle off a cliff at Balangan Beach—a dramatic drop into the ocean below. It was, by his own admission, a hobby. A stunt. A moment of “content.”
But the aftermath was neither cinematic nor funny.
The Stunt, The Damage, and The Refusal to Pay
The incident occurred sometime around March 23–24, 2026. A fellow traveler—an Austrian national—recorded the act using an action camera. The footage was uploaded to SD’s personal Instagram account, where it quickly spread.
The motorcycle, however, did not fare as well as the views. The bike—rented from Putu Rental Bike Bali—suffered severe damage. When the rental company sought compensation, SD refused. His reason? He claimed he could not afford to pay.
That refusal transformed a reckless act into a legal one.
The Run: From Bali to Sorong to Makassar
When immigration officials in Bali summoned SD for clarification, he did not show up. Instead, on March 25, 2026, he fled to Sorong, in West Papua—thousands of kilometers east of Bali.
His escape continued. On March 30, SD attempted to leave Indonesia altogether, boarding a flight from Sultan Hasanuddin International Airport in Makassar, bound for Kuala Lumpur. But immigration officers in Makassar intercepted him while he was in transit.
He was detained, returned to Bali, and placed under formal investigation.
Damage Control, But Too Late
Only after his arrest did SD finally pay the rental company for the damaged motorcycle. By then, however, the immigration process was already irreversible.
On April 2, he was deported on Qatar Airways flight QR963 to Doha, onward to Belgium.
But deportation may not be the end of his punishment.
The Ban: Up to 10 Years—or Lifetime
Bugie Kurniawan, Head of the Ngurah Rai Immigration Office, confirmed that SD has also been submitted for penangkalan—an administrative re-entry ban.
Under Indonesian immigration law, such bans can last:
- Up to 10 years for serious violations
- A lifetime in the most severe cases
Whether SD falls into the latter category remains to be seen. But the message from Bali’s immigration authorities is unambiguous.
“This action serves as a firm message that every legal violation will be acted upon without compromise,” said Felucia Sengky Ratna, Head of the Bali Regional Office of the Ministry of Law and Human Rights. “We urge all foreign nationals in Bali to comply with applicable regulations and maintain public order.”
A Pattern of Escalating Stupidity
Let us be direct.
Bali has always attracted adventurers. Cliff jumping, done safely and with respect for local guidelines, is not the issue. The issue is a grown man who:
- Destroyed someone else’s property
- Refused to pay for it
- Fled across the Indonesian archipelago when authorities called
- Attempted to leave the country entirely
- And only paid after being caught
This is not a “clumsy tourist” story. This is a story of someone who assumed Indonesian law would bend to his will. It did not.

What This Means for Expats, Travelers, and Global Readers
To the traveler: Viral fame is not worth deportation. If you damage property, pay for it. If authorities call, answer. Fleeing across the country does not erase your responsibility—it adds more charges.
To the expat: Bali is not a lawless playground. The immigration system has teeth, and it is increasingly willing to use them. The days of “just pay a fine and leave” are fading. Deportation followed by a decade-long ban is now the standard for serious violations.
To the global reader: Pay attention to this case. It signals a broader shift in how Indonesia—and Bali specifically—handles foreign nationals who treat the island as a consequence-free zone. The welcome mat is still out. But it comes with terms.
The Bigger Picture: Tourism Quality Control
Felucia Sengky Ratna made a point of thanking the public for reporting disruptive foreign nationals. That is not empty rhetoric. Immigration officials are now actively soliciting community reports.
The message is clear: Bali wants tourists. It does not want these tourists.
The Belgian man’s stunt may have been a hobby. But deportation is not a game. And the re-entry ban, if applied, will ensure he has many years to reflect on whether a viral video was worth losing access to one of the world’s most beautiful islands.
Summary: What Happened to SD
| Event | Date |
| Cliff-jump stunt at Balangan Beach | ~March 23–24, 2026 |
| Refused to pay for damaged rental motorcycle | ~March 24–25, 2026 |
| Fled to Sorong, West Papua | March 25, 2026 |
| Attempted to flee to Kuala Lumpur via Makassar | March 30, 2026 |
| Intercepted and detained in Makassar | March 30, 2026 |
| Returned to Bali for processing | March 31 – April 1, 2026 |
| Deported via Qatar Airways | April 2, 2026 |
| Submitted for re-entry ban | April 2, 2026 |












































