JOHOR BARU - SAND worth millions of ringgit is being illegally 'floated' out of the country daily via Sungai Johor here, The Star reported on Thursday, saying this has been going on for the past three years.
A Star team investigating the lucrative trade found that the sand ends up in Singapore, despite a ban on sand export imposed by the Malaysian Government.
Sand extraction is a common sight along the river as mining syndicates illegally transport millions of tonnes of sand, even on weekends and public holidays, via Danga Bay and Port of Tanjung Pelepas. The culprits use barges to pass through the international waters from Kota Tinggi and Ulu Tiram before arriving at local ports for shipment to Singapore.
The probe revealed that the barges are directed towards a private jetty or landing point at Pulau Punggol Timur in Singapore where the sand is unloaded.
A Singaporean company, which obtains the sand from a Malaysian partner, supplies it to the Housing Board of Singapore for its construction projects.
The Star team's visit to the landing point revealed that the sand from the barges was loaded onto trucks before being taken to the Pulau Punggol Timur jetty for storage. To circumvent the Malaysian ban on sand export, the syndicates are believed to be exporting this highly sought-after material as processed or 'packed' silica sand, an item that can be exported.
By obtaining sand from its Malaysian partner, the Singaporean company is making huge profits as it only pays S$30 per cubic metre compared with S$40 for the same amount of sand from Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. It is estimated that since August 2007, more than three million cubic metres of sand has been smuggled out through Sungai Johor.
Starprobe's findings also revealed that more than 90 per cent of the sand was extracted from Sungai Johor while the rest was from sand mines from the Kota Tinggi and Johor Baru districts. -- THE STAR
they will plug this now but they'll go another way.