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March 26, 2008
Old checkpoint reopened to ease causeway traffic
By Teh Joo Lin
A trial has been ongoing at the old Woodlands Checkpoint for the last two days to get the lorries through using the alternative checkpoint. -- ST PHOTO: ALAN LIM
HAVING to deal with trucks lined up bumper-to-bumper at the Causeway has prompted the Immigration & Checkpoints Authority (ICA) to open up a new route - in its old complex.

A trial has been ongoing at the old Woodlands Checkpoint for the last two days to get the lorries through using the alternative checkpoint, located not far from the current one.

The old checkpoint has been closed for the last nine years, but on Tuesday lorries started to trundle through.

This is the latest step the ICA has taken to try and ease traffic jams leading up to the Causeway, caused by checks on every vehicle in the search for fugitive Mas Selamat Kastari.

An ICA spokesman confirmed the old checkpoint was being used on a trial basis when when lorry traffic is heavy.

At about 4.45pm on Wednesday, the gates to the old checkpoint were opened to a line of waiting trucks on Woodlands Road, and traffic wardens waved vehicles to the new route.

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The thorough checks will also be in place at the old checkpoint, said the ICA spokesman.

The alternative is a godsend to drivers like Mr Baskar Muttiah, 45, who said he waited in line for about two hours on Tuesday before being diverted to the new route.

He had to go through the same stringent checks, which include X-rays, thumb-printing and a check on his cargo, he said, but clearance took just 10 minutes.

Traffic jams at Singapore's land checkpoints have been a daily affair during peak hours since Mas Selamat's Feb 27 escape.

The ICA had tried other things to ease congestion before this, including doubling of the number of open lanes at the Woodlands Checkpoint's cargo complex to 16.

The changes appear to have helped.

Lorry drivers near the checkpoints on Wednesday told The Straits Times they had been waiting about two hours, compared to the 19 hours some drivers waited weeks ago.

Speaking on Wednesday morning, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Home Affairs Wong Kan Seng said the ICA would 'work with all the stakeholders to explore practical ways to...try to bring the congestion level back to as close as before Mas Selamat escaped.'

'I understand and fully empathise with Singaporeans and other road users for the inconvenience and congestion that they face at the checkpoints.'

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