Malaysia is exploring plans to build the first Disney theme park in Southeast Asia, a government minister said yesterday.
Effendi Norwawi, Minister in the Prime Minister's Department in charge of economic affairs, said the government is in talks with Disneyland operators in Japan and the US to establish a theme park in the southern state of Johor, near Singapore.
"We are exploring all our options, including this [Disneyland] because in the southern corridor development, we want it to be a comprehensive and attractive region," he was quoted as saying by national Bernama news agency. "So this will include a theme park and other attractions."
Effendi said the government hoped for an agreement with Disney, but was also "discussing with several other parties to get the best option."
He did not give details.
Building a Disney park would likely boost tourism for Malaysia and would pose stiff competition to Singapore, which is building two casino resorts. Tourism is Malaysia's No. 2 foreign exchange earner, after manufacturing.
Walt Disney Co opened a theme park in Hong Kong in September.
Alannah Goss, a spokeswoman for Disney's Asian operations based in Hong Kong, said that the company constantly assesses strategic markets worldwide but declined to say if Johor is on the list. She said she was aware of ongoing talks.
"We are constantly evaluating strategic markets in the world to grow our park and resort business and the Disney brand," she said. "We continue to evaluate markets but at this time, we have no plans to announce regarding a park in Malaysia."
The Edge business weekly reported over the weekend that Malaysian government officials had made an attractive offer to Oriental Land Co, the Japanese operator of Tokyo Disneyland, to run a similar park in Johor.
The plan is to bring Mickey Mouse and the fantasyland to a 800-hectare site in the new proposed Nusajaya township in Johor, it quoted unidentified sources as saying. The 9,200-hectare township is developed by government-linked UEM World Bhd.
The newspaper said Walt Disney Co believed a Malaysian park would not compete with parks in Hong Kong and Tokyo.
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