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States of Malaysia

 
Wikipedia: States of Malaysia
The states and federal territories of Malaysia
Malaysia

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Politics and government of
Malaysia



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Malaysia is a federation which consists of thirteen states (Negeri) and three federal territories (Wilayah Persekutuan). Eleven states and two federal territories are located on the Malay Peninsula while the remaining two states and one federal territory are on the island of Borneo.

Contents

The states and federal territories

West Malaysia, on the Malay Peninsula

East Malaysia, on Borneo

Governance

The nine Malay States have a hereditary Ruler as titular Head of state and an executive Chief Minister or Menteri Besar as politically responsible Head of government. The rulers of Johor, Kedah, Kelantan, Pahang, Perak, Selangor and Terengganu are styled Sultans (typically Islamic). Only Negeri Sembilan's elective ruler holds the rare, autochthonous Malay title of Yang di-Pertuan Besar, whereas only the Ruler of Perlis is titled Raja. The Federal King (titled Yang di-Pertuan Agong) is elected (de facto rotated) among the nine rulers to serve a 5-year term. Former British settlements and crown colonies of Penang and Malacca (both peninsular) and Sabah and Sarawak (both on Borneo) each have a federally appointed titular Governor (styled Yang di-Pertua Negeri) and an executive Chief Minister or Ketua Menteri.

Each state has a unicameral legislature called Dewan Undangan Negeri (DUN, State Assembly). Members of DUN are elected from single-member constituencies drawn based on the population. The state leader of the majority party in DUN is usually appointed Chief Minister by the Ruler or Governor. The term of DUN members is five years unless the assembly is dissolved earlier by the Ruler or Governor on the advise of the Chief Minister. Usually, DUN of the states in Peninsular Malaysia are dissolved in conjunction with the dissolution of the federal parliament, in order to have state elections running concurrently with the parliamentary election. However, Rulers and Governors hold discretionary powers in dissolving the DUN.

Each state sends two representatives to the Dewan Negara (Senate), the upper house of the federal parliament.

As Malaysia is a federation, the governance of the country is divided between the federal and the state governments. The specific responsibilities of the federal and the state governments are listed in the Ninth Schedule of the Constitution of Malaysia. Theoretically, any matter not set out in the Ninth Schedule can be legislated on by the individual states. However, legal scholars generally view this as a "pauper's bequest" because of the large scope of the matters listed in the Ninth Schedule. The courts themselves have generally favoured a broad interpretation of the language of the Ninth Schedule, thus limiting the number of possible subjects not covered. The Ninth Schedule specifically lists the following matters as those that can only be legislated on by the states: land tenure, the Islamic religion, and local government.[1] Sabah and Sarawak have additional powers as part of the terms when they joined Malaysia, such as immigration controls.

The Parliament of Malaysia is permitted to legislate on issues of land, Islamic religion and local government in order to provide for a uniform law between different states, or on the request of the state assembly concerned. The law in question must also be passed by the state assembly as well, except in the case of certain land law-related subjects. Non-Islamic issues that fall under the purview of the state may also be legislated on at the federal level for the purpose of conforming with Malaysian treaty obligations.[2]

Singapore and Brunei

 Singapore was a Malaysian state from the formation of Malaysia on 16 September 1963 until it separated from the Federation on 9 August 1965.

 Brunei was invited to join the Federation but decided not to at the end due to several issues, such as the status of the Sultan within Malaysia, division of Bruneian oil royalties, and pressure from opposition groups which amounted to the Brunei Revolt.

Key statistics

Name Capital Region Status Population Area (km²) Pop density
(/km²)
Abbr. ISO FIPS
 Johor Johor Bahru West (Peninsula) State 3,300,000 19,984 137.6 JHR MY-01 MY01
 Kedah Alor Setar West (Peninsula) State 1,818,188 9,426 188.7 KDH MY-02 MY02
 Kelantan Kota Bharu West (Peninsula) State 2,100,000 14,922 93.8 KTN MY-03 MY03
 Kuala Lumpur West (Peninsula) Fed. Territory 1,887,674 243 7747.5 KUL MY-14
 Labuan Bandar Labuan East (Borneo) Fed. Territory 85,000 92 923.9 LBN MY-15 MY15
 Melaka Bandar Melaka West (Peninsula) State 733,000 1,650 432.1 MLK MY-04 MY04
 Negeri Sembilan Seremban West (Peninsula) State 1,004,807 6,645 137.4 NSN MY-05 MY05
 Pahang Kuantan West (Peninsula) State 1,396,500 35,964 38.2 PHG MY-06 MY06
 Perak Ipoh West (Peninsula) State 2,260,576 21,006 104.7 PRK MY-08 MY07
 Perlis Kangar West (Peninsula) State 215,000 810 244.9 PLS MY-09 MY08
 Pulau Pinang George Town West (Peninsula) State 1,503,000 1,046 1436.9 PNG MY-07 MY09
Flag of Putrajaya.png Putrajaya West (Peninsula) Fed. Territory 50,000 46 1087.0 PJY MY-16
 Sabah Kota Kinabalu East (Borneo) State 3,387,880 76,115 32.2 SBH MY-12 MY16
 Selangor Shah Alam West (Peninsula) State 5,000,000 7,956 628.4 SGR MY-10 MY12
 Sarawak Kuching East (Borneo) State 2,500,000 124,450 19.1 SRW MY-13 MY11
 Terengganu Kuala Terengganu West (Peninsula) State 1,150,286 12,955 83.0 TRG MY-11 MY13

See also

Notes

  1. ^  The code MY10 is not used in FIPS 10-4 but was used for FIPS 10-3[3] (for Sabah)
  2. ^  Territories named in official language for both FIPS 10-4 and ISO 3166-2:MY code lists[4]
  3. ^  Wilayah Persekutuan defined as the territories of Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya. Used by FIPS only

References

  1. ^ Wu, Min Aun & Hickling, R. H. (2003). Hickling's Malaysian Public Law, pp. 64–65. Petaling Jaya: Pearson Malaysia. ISBN 983-74-2518-0.
  2. ^ Wu & Hickling, pp. 65–66.
  3. ^ USAid Geocode
  4. ^ MaxMind GeoIP

External links



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