The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Malaysia ready to handle southern Johor airspace, says Loke

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SEPANG: Malaysia is ready to handle its airspace in southern Johor which was delegated to Singapore in 1974, Transport Minister Anthony Loke Siew Fook said yesterday.

He said this was among the outstandin­g and priority issues which were brought up at the bilateral meeting with his Singaporea­n counterpar­t Khaw Boon Wan at the KL Internatio­nal Airport here.

Speaking at a joint press conference with Khaw, Loke said Malaysia has invested a lot of money in terms of equipment and air traffic controller­s, as well as in the building of a new air traffic control in Sepang.

"This is our sovereignt­y issue. We wish to manage our own air space. That is our desire. For 45 years, the airspace has been delegated to Singapore. We are ready in (terms of) technical readiness.

"With these facilities, we are ready to manage our own airspace. That is our top priority in reviewing our agreement with Singapore," he said.

Last Saturday, Malaysia and Singapore agreed that in the spirit of bilateral cooperatio­n, Singapore will withdraw the Instrument Landing System (ILS) procedures for its Seletar Airport while Malaysia will indefinite­ly suspend its permanent Restricted Area (RA) over Pasir Gudang.

With this agreement, the transport ministers look forward to Malaysian carrier FlyFirefly Sdn Bhd commencing flights to Seletar Airport on April 21.

The air disagreeme­nt first surfaced on Nov 23 last year when Firefly said it will suspend all flights to Singapore from Dec 1, 2018, the day it was supposed to move its operations from Changi to Seletar Airport.

Malaysia objected to the new landing procedures for Seletar, claiming that they would impose height restrictio­ns and affect developmen­t in Pasir Gudang.

At today's meeting, the two transport ministers also noted that a high-level committee had been set up to review the Operationa­l Letter of Agreement between Kuala Lumpur and Singapore Area Control Centres Concerning Singapore Arrivals, Departures and Overflight­s 1974 (LOA 1974).

"Besides Firefly, Malindo is also interested to fly to Seletar Airport, and we hope all flights will resume in the near future. In the spirit of bilateral cooperatio­n, this is good cooperatio­n and the way forward for Malaysia and Singapore," Loke said.

Khaw, meanwhile, said the high-level committee, co-chaired by the Singapore Permanent Secretary of Transport and Malaysia's Secretary-General of the Transport Ministry, has been set up to review the existing airspace arrangemen­t under which the provision of air traffic services over southern Peninsular Malaysia has been delegated to Singapore.

"Malaysia has expressed its wish to take over control of the air traffic service provision in the airspace concerned and Minister Loke stressed that the review was important to Malaysia," he said.

Khaw said he has assured Loke that Singapore will approach the review with an open mind, bearing in mind the many stakeholde­rs involved and the critical need to ensure safety and efficiency in a busy airspace.

"With goodwill and compromise, I am sure that a win-win solution which does not undermine each other's core interests can be found," he said.

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