KUALA LUMPUR/JOHOR BAHRU – Are you allowed to cross the Causeway on foot? The answer, it appears, depends on who you ask.
The Malaysian authorities told The Straits Times that they are stepping up efforts to remind pedestrians that walking along the entire stretch of the Johor-Singapore Causeway is prohibited.
However, the Singapore authorities maintain that there are no specific rules prohibiting walking “on the Singapore side of the Causeway”.
Discussions over whether it is legal to cross the Causeway on foot surfaced online recently, after the Malaysian authorities installed a new “no walking” sign near their checkpoint.
Some netizens questioned the timing of the installation since some daily cross-border commuters have been regularly walking across the Causeway as a last resort to beat peak-hour congestion.
The Singapore authorities maintain that there are no specific rules prohibiting walking “on the Singapore side of the Causeway”.
PHOTO: MALAYSIAN HIGHWAY AUTHORITY
ST understands that the sign might have been installed after a spate of accidents involving pedestrians on the Causeway in recent months.
An international boundary line near the middle of the 1.05km Causeway divides the bridge between the two countries.
The boundary is clearly marked by two yellow boxes, as well as a change in the language used for road markings – “bus” and “car” on the Singapore side, and “bas” and “kereta” on the Malaysia one.
A January 2009 report by ST said the Malaysian authorities prohibited walking across the Causeway after the Bangunan Sultan Iskandar (BSI) Customs, Immigration and Quarantine Complex opened in December 2008, for “security” reasons.
Responding to ST queries on April 15, the Malaysian Highway Authority (LLM) reaffirmed that walking along the Causeway is strictly prohibited – in either direction.



