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Brick by brick: Indonesia to strengthen presence in a shoal near Malaysia, Singapore

Fadli (The Jakarta Post)
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Batam
Sun, January 23, 2022

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Brick by brick: Indonesia to strengthen presence in a shoal near Malaysia, Singapore Home Minister Tito Karnavian, along with other government officials, visits Karang Singa, a rock shoal off the coast of Bintan Island, Riau Islands province. The government will build infrastructure facilities on the shoal to reaffirm that Karang Singa, which is located near the country's border with Malaysia and Singapore, is Indonesian territory. (Kompas.com/-)

I

ndonesia will build a lighthouse on Karang Singa in Riau Islands province next month, in the latest move by the government to reaffirm the sovereignty of Indonesian territory near the maritime border with Singapore and Malaysia.

The plan was announced in a recent visit made by Home Minister Tito Karnavian, Deputy Defense Minister Lt. Gen. Muhammad Herindra, Maritime Security Agency (Bakamla) chief Vice Adm. Aan Kurnia and Riau Islands Governor Ansar Ahmad.

Speaking after visiting the area, Tito underlined the strategic importance of Karang Singa, which is also known as Carter Rif, considering its proximity to the territorial waters of other countries.

Karang Singa is a shoal of rock located off the coast of Bintan Island, Riau Islands province. It is situated near the disputed South Ledge, a low-tide elevation that is claimed by both Malaysia and Singapore.

Karang Singa is also situated in close proximity to Pulau Batu Puteh and Middle Rocks, all of which were also part of a territorial dispute between Malaysia and Singapore that was brought to the International Court of Justice (ICJ).

In 2008, the ICJ ruled that Pulau Batu Puteh was Singaporean territory and determined Middle Rocks as Malaysian territory. The court also ruled that South Ledge belonged to the country that had sovereignty in the territorial waters in which it was located.

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