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Sunday, September 30, 2012

Pulau-Pulau Di Malaysia

Pulau-Pulau Dalam Malaysia
Pulau Bangi


Banggi Island is an island located in the northeast of Kudat , Sabah , Malaysia . The island is an area of approximately 440.7 square kilometers, is the largest island in Malaysia, followed by Pulau Langkawi and Penang .
Banggi island located north of Sabah and near the Gulf Marudu . The highest peak of the island is a hill known as Bukit Sibumbung with 529 meters height. Banggi Island is the administrative center of the town Karakit and town houses Banggi Sub District Office, Rest House (Rest House), health clinic, police station, government departments, SMK Banggi, police base PGA, and the houses of the villagers. Town population was estimated at 1,000 people. Banggi Island is the main population of Ubian and Dusun tribes Bonggi. There are also other races of people Βajau, Kagayan, and Ѕuluk.
In 2003 the estimated population was 20,000. Sebogoh Island which is part of the small islands Banggi Island is the closest island to the Malaysia- Philippines .
Some of them are fishermen and water homes built on stilts of houses built in another shallow sloping beach.
Getting there: You can rent a boat or boat train from Marudu Bay or from Kudat .


Pulau Betruit

Pulau Bruit lies within the Rejang Delta, with the South China Sea to the north and west, Sarikei to the south and Kuala Matu to the east.The island is separated from the other islands in the Rejang delta and the mainland by the mouth of Batang Paloh ("batang" means river in th local language) on the south and Muara Lassa ( "muara" means mouth of river) on the east.
Currently the island is connected to the surrounding mainland and towns by two ferry points; one at the southern end and the other on the eastern side. The southern ferry connects the island by road to Tanjung Manis, a seaport, and Sibu town. The eastern ferry point connects it to Daro town and to Mukah, the divisional administrative centre.
A number of fishing villages are located.along the coast, especially on the western side,facing South China Sea and a few others along the rest of the Island's coast. The villages are usually located at the mouth of small rivers on the island. The two main villages are Kampung Semop and Kg. Bruit ( "kampong" or short form "Kg." means village). Currently a lot of the villages are connected by branch roads joint to the main road roughly traversing the island longitudinally.



Pulau Langkawi


Langkawi, officially known as Langkawi, the Jewel of Kedah (MalayLangkawi Permata Kedah) is an archipelago of 104 islands in the Andaman Sea, some 30 km off the mainland coast of northwestern Malaysia. The islands are a part of the state of Kedah, which is adjacent to the Thai border. On July 15, 2008, Sultan Abdul Halim of Kedah had consented to the change of name to Langkawi Permata Kedah in conjunction with his Golden Jubilee Celebration. By far the largest of the islands is the eponymous Pulau Langkawi with a population of some 64,792, the only other inhabited island being nearby Pulau Tuba. Langkawi is also an administrative district with the town of Kuah as largest town. Langkawi is a duty-free island.[1]


Pulau Layang-Layang

 Swallow Reef, known as Layang-Layang Island (Malay and Dusun for Place of Swallows) in MalaysiaDanwan Jiao (Chinese弹丸礁) in ChinaCelerio in the Philippines and Đá Hoa Lau in Vietnam, is an oceanic atoll of the Spratly Islands situated approximately 300 km northwest of Kota KinabaluSabah. Swallow Reef has a total land area of approximately 0.1 km². As with all of the Spratly Islands, the ownership of the island is disputed, but it is controlled by Malaysia and claimed by the People's Republic of ChinaRepublic of China (Taiwan) and Vietnam. It is notable that the Philippines does not lay any claim over Swallow Reef as it is obviously outside Kalayaan Island Group which was defined by Presidential Decree No. 1596 signed by Ferdinand Marcos.[1]

Pulau Pinang 




Penang was originally part of the Malay Sultanate of Kedah. On 11 August 1786, Captain Francis Light of the British East India Company landed in Penang and renamed it Prince of Wales Island in honour of heir to the British throne. Light then received it as a portion on his marriage to the daughter of the Sultan of Kedah. Light ceded Penang to the Government of India and promised the Sultan military protection from Siamese and Burmese armies who were threatening Kedah. Light is now credited as the founder of Penang.
Many early settlers succumbed to malaria, earning Penang the epithet "the White Man's Grave".[3]
Unbeknownst to the Sultan, Light had acted without the approval of the East India Company when he promised military protection. When the Company failed to aid Kedah when Siam attacked it, the Sultan tried to retake the island in 1790. The attempt was unsuccessful, and the Sultan was forced to cede the island to the Company for an honorarium of 6,000 Spanish dollars per annum. This was later increased to 10,000 dollars, with Province Wellesley on the mainland of the Malay Peninsula being added to Penang in 1800. An annual honorarium of 10,000 ringgit continues to this day be paid by the Malaysian Federal Government to the state of Kedah.
In 1826, Penang, along with Malacca and Singapore, became part of the Straits Settlements under the British administration in India, moving to direct British colonial rule in 1867. In 1946 it became part of the Malayan Union, before becoming in 1948 a state of the Federation of Malaya, which gained independence in 1957 and became Malaysia in 1963.
The island was a free port until 1969. Despite the loss of the island's free-port status, from the 1970s to the late 1990s the state built up one of the largest electronics manufacturing bases in Asia, in the Free Trade Zone around the airport in the south of the island.
On 7 July 2008, George Town, the historic capital of Penang, was formally inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site alongside with Malacca. It is officially recognized as having a unique architectural and cultural townscape without parallel anywhere in East and Southeast Asia.

Pulau Tioman







Tioman has been used for thousands of years by fishermen as an important navigation point and a source of fresh water and wood. During the past thousand years, it has played host to ChineseArab, and European trading ships, and often porcelain shards can be found on beaches around the island.
In more recent history, Tioman played host to both the British and the Japanese during the Second World War, and the waters around the island are littered with war remains (including HMS Repulse and HMS Prince of Wales).
Tioman island does not allow buildings to have more than 3 stories.

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