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A number of pilot projects to implement ASEAN Connectivity
will be implemented in Batam, Riau Islands, including ferry and flight
routes to a number of ASEAN countries.
The Batam Free Trade Zone
Management Board chief, Mustofa Wijaya, told The Jakarta Post on
Wednesday that Batam was geographically located close to three ASEAN
member states.
He said that movements of people and goods from
Batam to Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand had been going on for quite
some time, the area being well supported with sufficient transportation
facilities.
Currently, for example, there are five passenger
ferry terminals linking Batam with Malaysia and Singapore serving some
5,000 passengers per day.
“Infrastructure in Batam is ready to
support ASEAN Connectivity. Its close location to three ASEAN countries
has made connectivity no longer a new thing,” Mustofa said.
He
said among the projects to support ASEAN Connectivity was the opening of
Roll-On Roll-Off (Ro Ro) ferries linking Batam with Malaysia and
Singapore. The feasibility study for the project would soon be carried
out with operations slated for 2015.
Singapore is located some 20
kilometers northwest of Batam and can be reached from any of the
passenger ferry terminals within 45 minutes. Meanwhile, the Stulang Laut
terminal in the Malaysian state of Johor is reachable in one-and-a-half
hours.
“For flights, Batam has been linked with Kuala Lumpur by a Malaysian airline for the past two years,” Mustofa said.
“We
are also encouraging other flights to link Batam to other ASEAN states,
such as the Philippines and Thailand, which have economic potential but
depend on Singapore for air transportation.”
He added that his
agency would invite domestic airlines as well as those from the
destination countries to seek these opportunities.
Earlier,
Indonesia’s permanent representative to ASEAN, Ngurah Swajaya, said a
feasibility study to develop an ASEAN Ro Ro capability had been carried
out with a route linking Davao in the Philippines with Bitung, North
Sulawesi.
Further developments would see the opening of Ro Ro
routes from Bitung to Brunei Darussalam, Malaysia and Thailand, Ngurah
said during a visit to Batam from June 27 to 29.
He added that
ASEAN Connectivity needed a yearly investment of some US$50 billion
coming from a public-private partnership (PPP) scheme.
“China,
the European Union, Japan and the United States have stated their
interest in financing the drive because ASEAN will become a single
market to support the creation of the ASEAN Community,” he said.
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