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Singapore Parliament clears RTS Link law, paving way for seamless CIQ travel experience

Malay Mail

SINGAPORE, May 5 โ€” Singapore Parliament on Tuesday passed a new law that outlines the principles and powers for managing cross-border incidents involving the upcoming Johor Bahru-Singapore Rapid Transit System (RTS Link).

The Cross-Border Railways (Border Control Co-Location) Bill, which supports the operationalisation of the RTS Link, was passed after the third reading by Second Minister for Home Affairs Edwin Tong.

The bill will enable Malaysiaโ€™s Customs, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) operations in Singapore, as well as Singaporeโ€™s CIQ operations in Malaysia.

Tong said the bill comprises key principles on which Singapore and Malaysia have agreed for managing cross-border incidents on the RTS Link.

He explained that if the RTS Link completes its journey, any incident on board will be managed by the authorities of the country where the train stops.

Additionally, if a train stalls and is unable to complete its journey, the country in whose territory the train is locate will manage the incident, he said.ย 

โ€œIf a train stalls at the stretch of railway tracks located between the respective administrative boundary markers of both countries, represented by Pier 47 for Malaysia and Pier 48 for Singapore, both countries have agreed to use the nose of the train as the marker to determine the country with primary responsibility to manage the incident.ย 

โ€œThe country with primary responsibility will be the incident manager in this case, and will have command and control over incident management,โ€ he said during the second reading of the bill on Tuesday.ย 

Meanwhile, in his winding up speech, Tong explained that the bill will enable a seamless travel experience for commuters at the co-located CIQ checkpoints at Bukit Chagar and Woodlands North stations.

He emphasised it also operationalises a comprehensive set of arrangements to facilitate CIQ clearance and underpins jointly developed protocols for the coordinated management of cross-border incidents.

โ€œUltimately, the aim is to provide a travel experience that is smooth and seamless, but at the same time, strictly without compromising on safety and security, especially at our border controls.

โ€œThis will in turn help ensure that the RTS Link experience for travellers is not only convenient, safe and seamless, but also safe and secure,โ€ he said on Tuesday.

In February 2026, the Malaysian Parliament passed the Johor Bahru-Singapore Rapid Transit System (RTS) Link Bill 2026 to strengthen the legal framework for cross-border transport operations between the two countries.โ€” Bernama

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