Battle for Funtasy Island: Map blunder sparks Indonesia-Singapore row, troop deployment

Furious officials sent troops to Indonesian islets near Singapore after an online map of an eco-resort mistakenly suggested they belong to the city-state.

Indonesian lawmakers also demanded the country’s sovereignty be defended as anger mounted at the map of the under-construction “Funtasy Island.”

The map initially showed Pulau Manis – islets that make up the resort – in blue, the same color as Singapore, prompting outrage in Indonesian media at what they said was an attempt to claim their country’s territory by stealth.

The updated map from the Funtasy Island website. Originally the islands now marked in red were colored blue, angering Indonesian officials who somehow perceived this as Singapore laying claim to the land.

Both governments scrambled to defuse the escalating anger, with the city-state’s foreign ministry saying it was “deeply puzzled” since it did not claim the islands while Jakarta insisted it was a mistake.

Pulau Manis was also changed to red on the website map, one of the colors on the Indonesian flag.

But by this point, Indonesian army and navy personnel had already been dispatched from a local base to the resort to place the country’s flag on the highest point of one of the islands.

Local tourism chief Guntur Sakti said he had sent a warning to Singapore over the map, while Indonesian parliament speaker Ade Komaruddin told news website Tribunnews that “our sovereignty must be upheld.”

However Indonesian foreign ministry spokesman Arrmanatha Nasir played down the row, saying it was due to a mistake by the group Funtasy Island Development, which is building the resort.

“The issue has basically been resolved,” he said. “The mistake has been corrected.”

Funtasy Island Development insisted in a statement it recognized the islands were all Indonesian and it had never claimed the resort was inside Singaporean territory.

It added the map was just “to show the location of Funtasy Island Resort and for showing the distance between Singapore and Funtasy Island Resort.”

The affluent city-state and its huge neighbor have a historically acrimonious relationship. They clashed repeatedly last year after Indonesian forest fires choked Singapore with toxic smog for weeks.

The resort website describes the development, which is 16 kilometers (10 miles) from Singapore, as the world’s biggest eco park, where visitors can stay in villas and enjoy nature trails and water sports.

 

Text: AFP




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