New Straits Times

Johor plans to stop relying on Singapore for treated water

- By Izlaily Nurul Ain Hussein

JOHOR BARU: The Johor government is formulatin­g plans to end its dependence on Singapore for the state’s treated water supply.

Johor Menteri Besar Datuk Osman Sapian said Johor had all this while been paying Singapore for its supply of treated water.

He said the plan to have Johor meet its own needs for treated water would be finalised soon.

“The matter is still in the planning stages.

“I cannot share the details at the moment until the plan is ready to be implemente­d,” he said in a statement issued through the Johor Menteri Besar’s Office yesterday.

The statement referred to his speech made at the closing of the Johor Government’s Retreat Session with Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad and his cabinet ministers in Putrajaya on Thursday.

During the retreat, Dr Mahathir called on Johor to take proactive measures to solve the issue of buying treated water from Singapore.

Dr Mahathir said it did not make sense for a “wealthy country like Singapore” to still be buying water from Malaysia at such a low price of three sen per 1,000 gallons.

The prime minister said the Johor government and its people should be more vocal in raising Singapore-related matters, including its supply of water and electricit­y, instead of waiting for action from the federal government.

In an immediate response, Singapore Foreign Affairs Minister Vivian Balakrishn­an said he would leave it to Singaporea­ns to decide whether the republic has been “fair” or “morally wrong’ in the pricing of water.

Describing Dr Mahathir’s comments as “red herring” intended to rouse public opinion, Balakrishn­an, quoted by Today Online, told the Singapore Parliament that the republic and Malaysia “have chosen different fundamenta­l philosophi­es of governance and taken different paths of developmen­t”.

Balakrishn­an noted that the 1962 Water Agreement, which was guaranteed by both nations in the 1965 Separation Agreement, was not about “who is richer or poorer” but about the fundamenta­l principle of respecting the sanctity of agreements.

Last August, Dr Mahathir said he aimed to increase the price of raw water sold to Singapore by 1,000 per cent, to reflect the increased cost of living from when the agreement between both countries was inked.

Dr Mahathir repeated his stand on the issue last month, saying that Foreign Minister Datuk Saifuddin Abdullah had been tasked with leading the talks with Singapore on the issue.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia