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The Straits Times
S'pore, KL welcome new era of warm ties after landmark pact
SINGAPORE - Singapore and Malaysia on Tuesday welcomed a new era of warm bilateral relations as they inked an agreement settling a long-running dispute over the Republic's land reclamation activities.

The agreement is the first time the Southeast Asian neighbours have settled one of their many major bilateral disputes and senior officials from both sides said they were now optimistic the other issues could also be amicably resolved.
'I consider this as a milestone in Malaysia-Singapore relations,' Malaysian Foreign Minister Syed Hamid Albar said at a news conference here during the signing ceremony for the agreement.
'My government and I are very delighted that our two countries have been able to reach an amicable solution through a settlement agreement.'
The deal allows Singapore to continue reclamation works in the narrow Straits of Johor, a busy international waterway that divides the two nations, while cooperating with Malaysia to ensure navigational safety and environmental protection.
Mr Syed Hamid said the agreement, reached after almost two years of talks between officials from the two countries, showed 'there is nothing impossible if we move our hearts and minds' to seek a resolution.
His Singaporean counterpart, George Yeo, was equally upbeat and expressed hopes the friendly atmosphere between the two neighbours during the negotiations could be extended to resolve the outstanding disputes.
'With the signing, we will be closing an old chapter on a bilateral dispute which began during a period of more troubled bilateral relations but ends today in an atmosphere of warmer bilateral cooperation,' Mr Yeo said.
'The civil and civilised manner in which we have been able
to settle this dispute gives us confidence that our other bilateral disputes
can be settled in the same way.'