
Jalan Ismail Sultan heading to Stulang closed nightly until July 16
In a Facebook post, RTS Operations Pte Ltd (RTSO) said the closure will take place daily from 10pm to 5am, with construction expected to take seven hours each night.
The affected stretch is after the traffic light junction near the Customs, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) Complex and the R&F Mall area, close to GBW Hotel.
'To ease traffic flow, a contraflow will be activated periodically along Jalan Ismail Sultan (heading towards the city centre), allowing vehicles from the CIQ and R&F area travelling to Stulang to use the opposite lane as an alternative route,' the statement read.
Motorists are advised to comply with traffic signboards and follow the instructions of flagmen on duty at the site during the closure.
For further information, road users can refer to the diversion route map provided by the authorities via RTSO's official Facebook page.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
20 hours ago
- The Sun
Jalan Ismail Sultan heading to Stulang closed nightly until July 16
JOHOR BAHRU: Jalan Ismail Sultan heading towards Stulang, will be fully closed to all vehicles nightly from tonight until July 16 to make way for construction works under the Rapid Transit System (RTS) Link project. In a Facebook post, RTS Operations Pte Ltd (RTSO) said the closure will take place daily from 10pm to 5am, with construction expected to take seven hours each night. The affected stretch is after the traffic light junction near the Customs, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) Complex and the R&F Mall area, close to GBW Hotel. 'To ease traffic flow, a contraflow will be activated periodically along Jalan Ismail Sultan (heading towards the city centre), allowing vehicles from the CIQ and R&F area travelling to Stulang to use the opposite lane as an alternative route,' the statement read. Motorists are advised to comply with traffic signboards and follow the instructions of flagmen on duty at the site during the closure. For further information, road users can refer to the diversion route map provided by the authorities via RTSO's official Facebook page.


The Star
21 hours ago
- The Star
Jalan Ismail Sultan heading to Stulang route closed nightly until July 16
JOHOR BARU: The route from Jalan Ismail Sultan heading towards Stulang will be fully closed to all vehicles every night until July 16 to allow construction works under the Rapid Transit System (RTS) Link project. In a Facebook post, RTS Operations Pte Ltd said the closure will take place every night from 10pm to 5am. The affected stretch is after the traffic light junction near the Customs, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) Complex and the R&F Mall area, close to GBW Hotel. "To ease traffic flow, a contraflow lane will be activated periodically along Jalan Ismail Sultan (heading towards the city centre), allowing vehicles from the CIQ and R&F area travelling to Stulang to use the opposite lane as an alternative route," read the statement on Thursday (July 3). Motorists are advised to comply with traffic signboards and follow the instructions of flagmen on duty at the site during the closure. For further information, road users can refer to the diversion route map provided by the authorities via RTSO's official Facebook page. – Bernama


Daily Express
2 days ago
- Daily Express
Government bans import of dummy seat belt buckles
Published on: Wednesday, July 02, 2025 Published on: Wed, Jul 02, 2025 By: FMT Reporters Text Size: Dummy buckles are inserted into belt slots to prevent the alarm from triggering whenever a seat belt is not worn. (File pic) PETALING JAYA: The government has moved to ban the import of mechanisms such as dummy buckles and seat belt alarm stoppers, effective Dec 31. The move was announced through the Customs (Prohibition of Imports) (Amendment) (No. 2) Order 2025, published in the federal gazette. The order prohibits the import of 'dummy buckles, seat belt alarm stoppers, seat belt clip extenders or any other similar accessory or device intended to be inserted into a seat belt buckle to disable or bypass the safety reminder and render the seat belt mechanism inoperative'. The transport ministry previously said it was in talks with the domestic trade and cost of living ministry to introduce a ban on dummy buckles, following concerns over their widespread use to silence seat belt alarms. During a Chinese New Year traffic operation in Negeri Sembilan, authorities found that nearly 30% of 195 offenders caught for not wearing seat belts had used dummy buckles to avoid triggering the warning alert.