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East Malaysia

Coordinates:3°N114°E / 3°N 114°E /3; 114
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of Malaysia on the island of Borneo

A black and white general world map with East Malaysia highlighted in green
East Malaysia comprises the states of Sabah and Sarawak, as well as the federal territory of Labuan.
A map of Borneo showing East Malaysia and its major cities. Labuan is the island off the coast of Sabah near Kota Kinabalu.
Political map of the island of Borneo, with East Malaysia shown in orange

East Malaysia (Malay:Malaysia Timur), or theBorneo States,[1] also known asMalaysian Borneo, is the part ofMalaysia on and near the island ofBorneo, the world's third-largestisland. East Malaysia comprises the states ofSabah,Sarawak, and the Federal Territory ofLabuan. The small independent nation ofBrunei comprises two enclaves in Sarawak. To the south and southeast is the Indonesian portion of Borneo,Kalimantan.[2] East Malaysia lies to the east ofPeninsular Malaysia (also known as the States of Malaya), the part of the country on theMalay Peninsula. The two are separated by theSouth China Sea.[3][4]

East Malaysia is less populated and has fewer developed settlements than West Malaysia. While West Malaysia contains the country's major cities (Kuala Lumpur,Johor Bahru, andGeorge Town), East Malaysia is larger and much more abundant in natural resources, particularly oil and gas reserves. In the pan-regional style, city status is reserved for only a few settlements, includingKuching,Kota Kinabalu andMiri. Various other significant settlements are classified as towns, including many with over 100,000 residents. East Malaysia includes a significant portion of the biodiverseBorneo lowland rain forests andBorneo montane rain forests.

States and territories

[edit]

East Malaysia or the Borneo States comprise 2 of the 13 states, and one out of the three federal territories of Malaysia.

History

[edit]
See also:History of Sabah,History of Sarawak,History of Labuan, andBritish Borneo

Some parts of present-day East Malaysia, especially the coastal regions, were once part of thethalassocracy of theSultanate of Brunei.[5] However, most parts of the interior region consisted of independent tribal societies.[6]

In 1658, the northern and eastern coasts of Sabah were ceded to theSultanate of Sulu while the west coast of Sabah and most of Sarawak remained part of Brunei.[7]James Brooke assumes governorship in Sarawak in 1841.[8] In 1888, Sabah and Sarawak together with Brunei became British protectorates.[9] TheJapanese invaded the region in 1941 but they were fought away by the Australians in 1945[8] and a year later Sabah and Sarawak became separate British colonies.[10][11] The region will undergokonfrontasi with Indonesia but join Malaysia in 1963.[8]

Federation

[edit]

Sabah (formerlyBritish North Borneo) and Sarawak were separateBritish colonies fromMalaya, and did not become part of theFederation of Malaya in 1957. Later on however, the then Federation merged with the self-governing State of Singapore and the British Colonies of North Borneo (now known asSabah) andSarawak under theMalaysia Agreement as the States of Malaya, the Borneo States of Sabah and Sarawak, and the State of Singapore of the new Federation calledMalaysia on16 September 1963, now known asMalaysia Day. Singapore left the Federation two years later in 1965 after being expelled[12] by then the Prime Minister of Malaysia,Tunku Abdul Rahman. Previously, there were efforts to uniteBrunei, Sabah, and Sarawak under theNorth Borneo Federation but that failed after theBrunei Revolt occurred.

The Borneo States retained a higher degree of local government and legislative autonomy than the States of Malaya. For example, both states have their own immigration controls, requiring Malaysian citizens from West Malaysia to carry passports or identity cards when visiting East Malaysia.

The islands ofLabuan were once part ofNorth Borneo in 1946 before becoming aFederal Territory in Malaysia on 16 April 1984. It was used to establish a centre foroffshore finance in 1990.

Since 2010, there has been some speculation and discussion, at least on the ground level, about the possibility of secession from the Federation of Malaysia[13] because of allegations of resource mishandling, illegal processing of immigrants, etc.[14]

Administration

[edit]

The Borneo States of Sabah and Sarawak joined the Federation of Malaysia as equal partners with Malaya and Singapore. Sabah and Sarawak retained their rights covered under theMalaysia Agreement of 1963 and their degree of autonomy compared to the other states in Peninsular Malaysia. For example, the Malaysian Borneo States have separate laws regulating the entry of citizens from other states in Malaysia (including the other East Malaysian state), whereas, in Peninsular Malaysia, there are no restrictions on interstate travel or migration, including visitors from East Malaysia. There are also separateland laws governing Sabah and Sarawak, as opposed to the National Land Code, which governs Peninsular Malaysia.

In December 2021, constitutional amendments were passed to restore the status of Sabah and Sarawak as equal partners to Malaya, with 199 members of Parliament backing the amendment bill without opposition. Apart from restoring Article 1(2) to its pre-1976 wording, the bill definesMalaysia Day for the first time and redefines the federation with the inclusion of Malaysia Agreement (MA63). Previously, onlyMerdeka Day (independence day of the Federation of Malaya) was defined, and the federation was defined merely by the Malaya Agreement 1957.[15] The Constitution (Amendment) Act 2022 received royal assent on 19 January 2022 and came into force on 11 February 2022.[16][17]

With regard to the administration of justice, the courts in East Malaysia are part of the federal court system in Malaysia. The Constitution of Malaysia provides that there shall be twoHigh Courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction.[18] The High Court in Malaya and theHigh Court in Sabah and Sarawak (formerly the High Court in Borneo). The currentChief Judge of Sabah and Sarawak isAbang Iskandar Abang Hashim from Sarawak. His office is the fourth highest in the Malaysian judicial system (behind the Chief Judge of Malaya, President of theCourt of Appeal, andChief Justice of Malaysia).

Politics

[edit]

Compared to West Malaysia, political parties in Sarawak and Sabah started relatively late. This first political party in Sarawak emerged in 1959 while the first political party in Sabah emerged in August 1961. Sarawak held its first local authorities election in 1959 and did not have any directly elected legislature until1970. Sabah only held its first district council election in December 1962 and first direct election in April 1967. Both the states were new and had little experience in organised, competitive politics. Therefore, there had been the appearance and rapid disappearance of political parties in Sarawak and Sabah within a short period of time, with some parties took opportunistic moves to form alliances without a definite loyalty to a certain political alignment. The ethnic composition of East Malaysia is also different from West Malaysia. The indigenous people in both Sarawak and Sabah do not form an absolute majority, while the non-native population in East Malaysia mainly consisting of entirely Chinese. Political parties in Sarawak and Sabah were formed largely based on communal lines and can be categorised roughly into native non-Muslim, native Muslim, and non-native parties. With the support of the Malaysia federal government, native Muslim parties in Sabah and Sarawak were strengthened. In Sabah, the native Muslim partyUnited Sabah National Organisation (USNO) first clinged on the chief minister post in 1965 and later consolidated its power in 1967. In Sarawak, native Muslim party named Parti Bumiputera (which later regrouped intoParti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB) held the chief minister post since 1970.[19]

In 1976, all the Sabah and Sarawak MPs (except 4 absentees) supported the Malaysian parliament bill which downgraded both the states from being equal partners toMalaya as a whole, to one of the 13 states in the federation.[20]

Since 2008, East Malaysia played a more significant role in the national political landscape. The loss of two-thirds majority ofBarisan Nasional (BN) government in the West Malaysia caused the BN to rely on East Malaysian politicians to cling on power.[21] After the conclusion of2013 Malaysian general election, there was an increase in ministers and deputy ministers allocation for East Malaysia in theMalaysian Cabinet from 11 out of 57 portfolios in2008 election to 20 out of 61 portfolios.[22][23] There had been no prime minister or deputy prime minister coming from East Malaysia until 2022,[24][25] whenFadillah Yusof became the first deputy prime minister from East Malaysia.[26] On several occasions, the federal government chaired its weekly cabinet meetings in Kuching instead ofPutrajaya.[27][28]

As of 2012, Sarawak, Sabah and Labuan held a total of 57 out 222 seats (25.68%) in theMalaysian parliament.[29] Since 2014, Sarawak have been actively seeking for devolution of powers from the Malaysian federal government.[30] In October 2018, bothSabah andSarawak chief ministers met to discuss common goals in demanding from the Malaysian federal government regarding the rights stipulated inside theMalaysia Agreement.[31] In December 2021, constitutional amendments were passed to restore the status of Sabah and Sarawak as equal partners to Malaya, with 199 members of Parliament backing the amendment bill without opposition. Apart from restoring Article 1(2) to its pre-1976 wording, the bill definesMalaysia Day for the first time and redefines the federation with the inclusion of Malaysia Agreement (MA63). Previously, onlyMerdeka Day (independence day of the Federation of Malaya) was defined, and the federation was defined merely by the Malaya Agreement 1957.[15] The Constitution (Amendment) Act 2022 received royal assent on 19 January 2022 and came into force on 11 February 2022.[16][17]

Physical geography

[edit]
A topographic map of Borneo with East Malaysia located on the northern portion of the island

The landscape of East Malaysia is mostlylowland rain forests with areas ofmountain rain forest towards the hinterland.

The total area of East Malaysia is 198,447 km2, representing approximately 60% of the total land area ofMalaysia and 26.4% of the total area ofBorneo, which is 50% bigger thanPeninsular Malaysia at 132,490 square kilometres (51,150 sq mi), comparable withSouth Dakota orGreat Britain.

East Malaysia contains the five highestmountains in Malaysia, the highest beingMount Kinabalu at 4095 m, which is also the highest mountain in Borneo and the 10th highest mountain peak in Southeast Asia. It also contains the two longest rivers in Malaysia –Rajang River andKinabatangan River.[32]

Banggi Island inSabah andBruit Island inSarawak are the two largest islands that are located entirely within Malaysia.[32] The largest island is Borneo, which is shared withIndonesia andBrunei.[33] The second largest island isSebatik Island, in Sabah, which is shared with Indonesia.[34][35]

Sarawak contains theMulu Caves withinGunung Mulu National Park. ItsSarawak Chamber is the largest (by area) known cave chamber in the world. The Gunung Mulu National Park was declared aUNESCOWorld Heritage Site in November 2000.[36]

Sabah's attractions include World Heritage SiteKinabalu Park (which includesMount Kinabalu),[37] andSipadan Island (a diving and bio-diversity hot-spot).[38]

Geology

[edit]

Several oil and gas fields have been discovered offshore, including the Samarangoil field (1972) offshore Sabah, the Baronia oil field (1967) offshore Sarawak, and the Central Luconianatural gas fields (1968), also offshore Sarawak.[39] The Baronia Field is adomalstructural trap between two east–west growthfaults, which produces from lateMiocenesandstones interbedded withsiltstones andclays at 2 km depth in 75 m of water.[39]: 431  The Samarang Field produces from late Miocene sandstones in an alternating sequence of sandstones, siltstones and clays in ananticline at a depth of about 3 km in water 9–45 m.[39]: 431  The Central Luconia Gas Fields produce from middle to late Miocenecarbonate platform and pinnacle reefs from 1.25 to 3.76 km deep and water depths 60-100m.[39]: 436–437 

Population

[edit]
Ethnicity in East Malaysia (as of 2010)
  1. Non-Malay Bumiputera's (52.1%)
  2. Non-Citizens (17.7%)
  3. Chinese (15.3%)
  4. Malay (13.6%)
  5. Other Ethnicities (1.03%)
  6. Indians (0.27%)
Religion in East Malaysia (2020 Census)
  1. Islam (55.3%)
  2. Christianity (35.0%)
  3. Buddhism (8.30%)
  4. No religion (0.80%)
  5. Unknown (0.34%)
  6. Hinduism (0.15%)
  7. Others (0.29%)

The total population of East Malaysia in 2010 was 5.77 million (3.21 million in Sabah, 2.47 million in Sarawak, and 0.09 million in Labuan),[40] which represented 20.4% of the population of Malaysia. A significant part of the population of East Malaysia today reside in towns and cities. The largest city and urban centre isKuching, which is also the capital of Sarawak and has a population of over 600,000 people.Kota Kinabalu is the second largest, and one of the most important cities in East Malaysia. Kuching, Kota Kinabalu, andMiri are the only three places with city status in East Malaysia. Other important towns includeSandakan andTawau in Sabah,Sibu andBintulu in Sarawak, andVictoria in Labuan. The 2020 estimated population is 6 million (3,418,785 in Sabah, 2,453,677 in Sarawak and 95,120 in Labuan).

The earliest inhabitants of East Malaysia were theDayak people and other related ethnic groups such as theKadazan-Dusun people. These indigenous people form a significant portion, but not the majority, of the population. For hundreds of years, there has been significant migration into East Malaysia and Borneo from many parts of theMalay Archipelago, including Java, theLesser Sunda Islands,Sulawesi, andSulu. More recently, there has been immigration fromIndia and China.

The indigenous inhabitants were originally animists. Islamic influence began as early as the 15th century, while Christian influence started in the 19th century.

The indigenous inhabitants are generally partisan and maintain culturally distinct dialects of theMalay language, in addition to their own ethnic languages. Approximately over one-tenth of the population of Sabah and Labuan, and almost a quarter of the population of Sarawak, is composed of localChinese communities. The localMalay consists approximately 13.6% in East Malaysia, with over two-thirds of Malay in East Malaysia resides in the state of Sarawak, predominantly found in the city ofKuching and the surrounding areas. While amongIndian communities, unlike their fellows in Peninsular Malaysia where they are considered as one of the several major ethnic groups in Peninsula, their population in East Malaysia was quite tiny, consists just about 0.3%, with the majority of them resides in the urban areas such asKota Kinabalu,Tawau,Labuan andMiri, in addition to Kuching.

However, the demography of Sabah has been altered dramatically with the alleged implementation ofProject IC in the 1990s. Citizenships are alleged to be granted to immigrants fromIndonesia andPhilippines in order to keep theUMNO ruling party in power.[41]Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI) has been conducted from 11 August 2012 to 20 September 2013. The outcome of the investigation was submitted to the prime minister on 19 May 2014.[42] The report was released on 3 December 2014 after 6 months delay. It stated that Project IC might have existed, which was responsible for a sudden spike in the state population. However, the report did not pinpoint any responsibility except for "corrupt officials" who took advantage of the system.[43]

Education

[edit]

East Malaysia currently has two public universities, namelyUniversiti Malaysia Sarawak (UNIMAS) andUniversiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS).Universiti Teknologi Mara (UiTM) also has branch campuses in both states. Labuan's own institution of higher education is Universiti Malaysia Sabah Labuan International Campus, which has a branch in Sepanggar Bay, Kota Kinabalu. All prospective university entrants from Sabah, Sarawak, and Labuan must sit the examinations of one matriculation college, Kolej Matrikulasi Labuan.

UCSI University, Sarawak Campus,University College of Technology Sarawak (UCTS)Tunku Abdul Rahman University College (Sabah campus),International University College of Technology Twintech (Sabah campus), andOpen University Malaysia (Sabah campus) have local private university branch campuses in East Malaysia.Curtin University, Malaysia andSwinburne University of Technology Sarawak Campus are foreign university branch campuses in Sarawak.

There are 4 teacher training colleges (Malay:Maktab Perguruan) in Sarawak, and 4 teacher training colleges in Sabah.[44]

Transport

[edit]

ThePan Borneo Highway connects Sabah, Sarawak, and Brunei. The road has been poorly maintained since it was built. The narrow road is dark at night without any street lights and there are many danger spots, sharp bends, blind spots, potholes, and erosion.[45] However, federal government funds have been allocated for the upgrade of the highway, which will be carried out in stages until completion in 2025.[46]

The major airports in East Malaysia areKuching International Airport,Labuan Airport andKota Kinabalu International Airport.Kota Kinabalu International Airport has also become the second largest airport in Malaysia, with an annual capacity of 12 million passengers – 9 million for Terminal 1 and 3 million for Terminal 2. There are frequent air flights by includingMalaysia Airlines (MAS) andAirAsia between East Malaysia and Peninsular Malaysia. Other ports of entry to East Malaysia includeSibu Airport,Bintulu Airport, andMiri Airport in Sarawak,Sandakan Airport andTawau Airport in Sabah. MAS also operates international flights to major cities in East Malaysia.[47]

The rural areas in Borneo can only be accessed by air or river boat. River transport is especially prevalent in Sarawak because there are many large and long rivers, withRajang River being the most used. Rivers are used by boats and ferries for communications (i.e. mail) and passenger transport between inland areas and coastal towns. Timber is also transported via vessels and log carriers down the rivers of Sarawak.[47]

The Labuan Ferry operates boat express and vehicle ferries fromLabuan Island toSabah,Sarawak andBrunei.[48] Ferries have overtaken air travel as the chieftransportation mode on and off the island.

Economy

[edit]

Shipyards in Sabah and Sarawak build steel vessels for offshore supply, tug, barge and river ferries when compared to shipyards in Peninsular Malaysia that focus on building steel and aluminium vessels for the government as well as oil and gas companies. This makes the shipyards in Sabah and Sarawak more competitive and innovative in design, process and material, compared to the shipyards in peninsular Malaysia, where the big projects are dependent on government funding.[49]

Security

[edit]
Main article:Cross border attacks in Sabah

The state of Sabah has been subjected to attacks byMoro pirates and militants since the 1960s and intensification in 1985, 2000, 2013. TheEastern Sabah Security Zone (ESSZONE) andEastern Sabah Security Command (ESSCOM) were established on 25 March 2013 to tighten security in the region. Since 2014, a 12-hour dusk-to-dawn curfew has been imposed on six Sabah east coast districts.[50]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  39. ^abcdScherer, F.C., 1980, Exploration in East Malaysia Over the Past Decade, in Giant Oil and Gas Fields of the Decade, AAPG Memoir 30, Halbouty, M.T., editor, Tulsa, American Association of Petroleum Geologists,ISBN 0891813063, p. 424
  40. ^"Chart 3: Population distribution by state, Malaysia, 2010"(PDF).Population Distribution and Basic Demographic Characteristics 2010 (in Malay and English). Department of Statistics, Malaysia. p. 2 (p. 13 in PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 30 August 2011. Retrieved13 December 2012.
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  43. ^Chi, Melissa (3 December 2014)."'Corrupt officials' blamed for Sabah problems, but RCI says hands tied".The Malay Mail.Archived from the original on 25 December 2014. Retrieved10 December 2014.
  44. ^"Institut Pendidikan Guru (Teachers' Training Institute)". Kementerian Pendidikan Malaysia (Malaysian Ministry of Education). Archived fromthe original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved22 December 2015.IPG Kampus Sarawak, IPG Kampus Tun Abdul Razak, IPG Kampus Batu Lintang(1st page), IPG Kampus Rajang (2nd page)
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  49. ^van der Heide, Egide (2018).Port Development in Malaysia: An Introduction to the Country's Evolving Port Landscape(PDF). Kingdom of the Netherlands: Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Malaysia. p. 20. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 30 September 2021. Retrieved30 September 2021.
  50. ^Chan, Julia (5 November 2014)."Sabah curfew renewed for the seventh time".The Malay Mail.Archived from the original on 22 December 2014. Retrieved6 November 2014.

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]

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