It is unclear whether the directive will affect projects which have secured approvals for the aforementioned processes. The Edge has reached out to a DBKL spokesperson, who declined to elaborate on the letter.
On Monday, Minister in the Prime Minister's Department (Federal Territories) Dr Zaliha Mustafa was quoted as saying that DBKL has been directed to collaborate closely with geologists and infrastructure experts to evaluate and mitigate the risk of future sinkholes.
A staff member of the Palace Hotel in Jalan Masjid India, who wanted to be known only as Jamal, told ST he was not worried about falling into any sinkholes on the road.
However, the same could not be said of guests, with the hotel seeing 20 per cent of bookings cancelled since the accident happened.
“It’s not the first time this has happened. There was a sinkhole a few months ago, there was another one last month and then the sinkhole that took the tourist and now this one. I am just cautious when I walk around, and I avoid pavements that are sunken,” said Mr Jamal.
This post has been edited by diffyhelman2: Aug 28 2024, 04:53 PM
Looks like the whole masjid India area might be unsafe. Not sure how many holes are there now.
My thoughts exactly. If really do study now, soooo many bisnes in the area will fold. For sure therewill be protests and counter-protests. And then it will have become a political decisions already.