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Talks with S'pore next month over maritime boundary spat, Senate told

A meeting will be held between the Foreign Ministry officials of Malaysia and Singapore next month to discuss the ongoing maritime boundary dispute, Foreign Minister Saifuddin Abdullah said today.

He said the essence of the meeting would be on the issue of Johor Bahru's port expansion and waters of the coastal area of Tuas, Singapore.

“This is the matter we want to resolve, and I'm confident the talks will go smoothly without undermining the relations between the two countries,” he said in response to a supplementary question from Senator Razali Idris who wanted to know the latest development in the dispute, during the oral question-and-answer session in the Dewan Negara.

Saifuddin said the two countries have previously engaged in talks on several issues and resolved them.

These issues include those on the High-Speed Rail (HSR) and water agreement.

The latest, he said, involved issues over airspace and maritime boundaries cropping up.

The airspace issue relates to Malaysia objecting to Singapore’s use of the Instrument Landing System for the approach to the republic’s Seletar Airport because of encroachment into Malaysian air space. The airport is just two kilometres away from Pasir Gudang.

“On both these issues, officials from both sides met last week and it has helped to relieve tensions. The matters will be discussed further (by both sides) early next month,” he said.

Meanwhile, speaking to reporters at the Parliament lobby later, Saifuddin explained that he was in constant touch with his Singaporean counterpart Dr Vivian Balakrishnan on issues involving the neighbours.

"So far, my relations with Foreign Minister Dr Vivian is very good. We have good ’WhatsApp’ exchanges. The latest WhatsApp exhange was where we would be going for a holiday in conjunction with the New Year, this shows bilateral relations are good,” he said.


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