
While much of Malaysia is still asleep, Mohd Nor Izham’s alarm rings at 3am.
By 4am, the 32-year-old technician is already on his motorcycle, racing against the clock to beat the congestion at the Johor Causeway so he can report for his 7am shift at Changi Airport.

“If I leave a little late, I will definitely get stuck. Sometimes the journey takes an hour, sometimes two, depending on the traffic,” he told FMT.
Izham is one of hundreds of thousands of Johoreans who make the daily cross-border commute to Singapore for work.
Every day, between 350,000 and 500,000 travellers pass through the Causeway, one of the busiest land crossings in the world.
The gruelling routine also comes with a financial cost. Izham spends about S$5 (RM15) on tolls each day, with his monthly commuting expenses, including petrol, reaching around S$100 (RM315).
For 27-year-old Zamir Abdullah, who recently started working at a hospital in Singapore, the biggest hurdle comes before he even boards a bus.
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