'Sipadan' is the only ''
oceanic island'' in
Malaysia, rising 2,000 feet or 600m from the seabed. It is located east of
Tawau (Borneo), in the
Celebes Sea. It was formed by living corals growing on top of an extinct ''
volcanic cone'' that took thousands of years to develop. Sipadan is located at the heart of the
Indo-Pacific basin, the centre of one of the richest marine habitats in the world. More than 3,000 species of fish and hundreds of coral species have been classified in this ecosystem.
Rare diving scenes such as schools of greenback turtles and hawksbill turtles nesting and mating, schools of
barracuda &
big-eye trevally in tornado-like formations, pelagic species such as
manta rays,
eagle rays,
scalloped hammerhead sharks and
whale sharks can be seen here.
A mysterious turtle tomb lies underneath the column of the island, formed by an underwater
limestone cave with a labyrinth of tunnels and chambers that contain many skeletal remains of turtles.
History

The Malaysian military protecting divers against possible terrorist attacks.
In the past, the island was at the centre of a territorial dispute between
Malaysia and
Indonesia. The matter was brought for adjudication before the
International Court of Justice and, at the end of 2002, the Court awarded the island along with the island of
Ligitan to Malaysia, on the basis of the "effective occupation" displayed by the latter's precedessor (Malaysia's former colonial power, Great Britain) and the absence of any other superior title. The
Philippines had applied to intervene in the proceedings on the basis of its claim to Northern Borneo, but its request was turned down by the Court early in 2001.
In April 2000, 21 people were kidnapped by the Philippine terrorist group
Abu Sayaff. The armed terrorists arrived by boat and forced 10 tourists and 11 resort workers at gun point to board the vessels and brought the victims to
Mindanao. All victims were eventually released.
In year 2004, the Government of Malaysia ordered all on-site dive & resort operators of Sipadan to move their structures out of the island by the 31st of December 2004. This move is mainly to conserve a balanced eco-system for Sipadan and its surrounding. Diving will continue to be allowed in Sipadan for divers who are ferried in and out by dive & resort operators from the mainland and surrounding islands.
On
May 15 2006, a barge carrying thousands of tonnes of building material beached on the island, destroying a significant portion of reef between the old pier and Barracuda Point, said to be about 372sq metres
The purpose of the building supplies (mainly concrete and gravel) was apparently for a USD1.3 million tourist facility including resthouse, toilets and scuba shop, said the State Minister of Tourism, Culture and Environment Tan Sri Chong Kah Kiat but denied by the Chief Minister Datuk Seri Musa Aman. Later, it was reported that it was a Federal Government funded project.
References
★
FiNS Blog » Blog Archive » Sipadan — Tragic Incident: eyewitness account of barge damage to Sipadan reef.
★
Massive steel barge crashes into Sipadan reef
★ Fabio Spadi (2003) "Pulau Ligitan and Pulau Sipadan: New Parameters for the Concept of Dependency in the Maritime Environment? The ICJ judgment of 17 December 2002",
''The International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law'' 18: 295-310
It was where the Abu Sayyaf has taken their hostages.
External links
★
Sipadan Island
★
Sipadan page on the official site of Tourism Malaysia