There is a certain
genius—almost artistic—in how we manage Langkawi. Not the kind that builds a
world-class destination, but the sort that slowly, methodically, and with
admirable consistency, squeezes the life out of one.
First, it was the
moral housekeeping. The quiet tightening around alcohol sales, the raised
eyebrows at beach attire—as though tourists flying in from Germany or Australia
might suddenly develop a fondness for modest swimwear upon landing. One could
almost hear the unspoken marketing slogan: “Langkawi—Now with Less Fun.” But
tourists, being a forgiving species (and often armed with prepaid hotel
bookings), still came. They adapted. They drank less publicly, dressed more
cautiously, and told themselves the sunsets were worth it. And then came the
masterstroke: make it harder to get there.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org
The recent reduction
in ferry services—from five daily trips to three—has all the elegance of a
self-inflicted wound. For an island where, by admission, about 70% of visitors
arrive by sea, this is not just a logistical adjustment.
Imagine running a
restaurant, a souvenir stall, or a modest homestay in Kuah, only to discover
that your customer base has been quietly throttled—not by lack of demand, but
by lack of seats on a boat. It is the kind of policy contradiction that
deserves a case study. On one hand, we speak earnestly about boosting domestic
tourism, encouraging Malaysians to rediscover their own backyard. On the other,
we ration the very ferries that make such rediscovery possible.
The ferry operators
have their reasons. Rising diesel costs, operational sustainability—perfectly
rational explanations in isolation. But public infrastructure, especially one
that underpins an entire island economy, is not meant to operate like a boutique
startup delicately balancing its books. It is, or should be, a lifeline.
One wonders what the
long-term vision is. Is Langkawi meant to be a vibrant international
destination, competing with Phuket or Bali? Or is it slowly being
rebranded—unofficially, of course—into something more restrained, more
“compliant,” and ultimately, less visited? Because tourism, inconveniently,
thrives on ease. Easy access, easy movement, easy enjoyment. Start inserting
friction—whether moral, logistical, or financial—and tourists will do what
tourists do best: go somewhere else. And there is no shortage of “somewhere
else.”
The real tragedy
here is not that Langkawi will collapse overnight. It won’t. Decline, like all
well-managed things or buildings in this country, will be gradual. Quiet.
Explained away with statistics and temporary measures. Until one day, the
island that once bustled with energy will simply feel… dead! Not overcrowded.
Not chaotic.
Just… dead which, in
tourism terms, is often a polite way of saying: R.I.P.
Reference:
#EiTahuTak | OPINION | Langkawi: The Island That Put
Up a “Closed for Business” Sign—One Policy at a Time, Mihar
Dias, Newswav, 25 Apr 2026






