The Borneo Post

Attorney-General to lead team of experts on Pulau Batu Puteh

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PUTRAJAYA: Attorney- General Tan Sri Mohamed Apandi Ali will lead a team of experts to take on the revision of the Internatio­nal Court of Justice ( ICJ)’s judgment over Pulau Batu Puteh.

Keeping tight- lipped on members of the high- calibre team, he said he was confident that the eight local and internatio­nal experts were at par with the Singapore team.

“I am keeping them close to my chest, I am not going to announce them now.

“But I can tell you, we can be at par with whatever team Singapore is sending and I am concentrat­ing on this Batu Puteh issue.

“Till now, I have six experts excluding me, and most likely to add another two.

“I will announce the personalit­ies later,” he told reporters after attending the Attorney- General Chamber’s gathering, here, yesterday.

On Feb 3, Malaysia filed an applicatio­n for revision of the ICJ judgment over Pulau Batu Puteh, citing three documents recently declassifi­ed by the United Kingdom to support the applicatio­n.

These are the internal correspond­ence of the Singapore colonial authoritie­s in 1958, an incident report filed in 1958 by a British naval officer, and an annotated map of naval operations from the 1960’s.

Mohamed Apandi said he was confident that the new evidence could give the case a favourable outcome.

Asked on the case date, the attorney- general said the applicatio­n must be served to Singapore and a certain period of time given for Singapore to respond before both parties were called to the ICJ in The Hague.

“Then, we appear at the ICJ for a mention date and probably fix a date from there.

“However, the ICJ is very busy with other mitigation between African countries. So, to get a date slotted may take some time, either within this year or next year,” he said.

Mohamed Apandi explained briefly that the 2008 ICJ decision favouring Singapore was centred around a communicat­ion by the deputy state secretary of Johor who evidently told Singapore that Malaysia was not claiming the sovereignt­y of the “white rock island” in 1953.

“Now, we can use new evidence in the form of documentar­y, telegrams, correspond­ence (1958) and maps (1962-1966), which were subsequent to 1953.

“So, all these show clearly Pulau Batu Puteh belongs to Johor,” he said.

Asked why Malaysia did not bring the evidence to the ICJ, Mohamed Apandi said those evidence were not available then because they were classified documents belonging to the British government and not open to the public.

“The British government only declassifi­ed the documents in September 2013, which was five years after the ICJ decision on Pulau Batu Puteh”.

Once it is open to the public, my team started digging and went through over 3,000 documents to find the three evidence. — Bernama

 ??  ?? Volunteers ready to play their role after the launching of the state-level PSSMM in Terengganu. — Bernama photo
Volunteers ready to play their role after the launching of the state-level PSSMM in Terengganu. — Bernama photo

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