The Borneo Post (Sabah)

PM wants to renegotiat­e ‘ridiculous’ water supply agreement with S’pore

- AFP/Bernama

KUALA LUMPUR: Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad said Monday he wants to renegotiat­e a “ridiculous” water supply agreement with Singapore, the latest sign of fraying ties between the neighbours since last month’s shock election.

The 92-year-old returned for a second time as premier after his opposition alliance scored an unexpected victory at the polls, toppling a long-ruling coalition that Mahathir himself once headed.

During his first stint in charge of the country from 1981-2003, Malaysia had famously stormy ties with Singapore -- and Mahathir has wasted no time in taking aim at the tiny city-state again.

In his latest salvo, he said it was “manifestly ridiculous” that Kuala Lumpur sells water for three Malaysian cents (less than one US cent) per thousand gallons to its resource-poor neighbour.

“That was okay way back in the 1990s or 1930s. But now what can you buy with three sen (cents)? Nothing,” he told Singapore broadcaste­r Channel NewsAsia in an interview.

Asked about plans to renegotiat­e the long-standing water supply agreement, he said: “We are studying the case properly and we’ll make a presentati­on.”

The Singapore Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday said the 1962 Water Agreement is a fundamenta­l agreement that was guaranteed by both government­s in the 1965 Separation Agreement which was registered with the United Nation.

Both sides must comply fully with all the provisions of these agreements, it said.

A large amount of Singapore’s water comes from Malaysia’s southern state of Johor. Under a 1962 agreement, Singapore can draw up to 250 million gallons of water per day from the Johor River.

The neighbours have had a difficult relationsh­ip since Singapore was expelled from the Malaysian Federation in 1965 over ethnic issues after a shortlived, stormy union.

Relations in subsequent decades were punctuated by occasional bickering, on many occasions over the water supply issue, but were largely warm under the last Malaysian government, led by

scandal-mired Datuk Seri Najib Razak.

However ties already look rocky since Mahathir’s return to office.

In just a few weeks, he has put a planned high-speed rail line linking Kuala Lumpur to Singapore on hold, and announced that Malaysia wants to develop an island on rocks at the entrance to the Singapore Strait, an area of great strategic importance to the city-state. -

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia