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Federal territories of Malaysia

Territories administered by Federal Government of Malaysia


Summary

Territories administered by Federal Government of Malaysia

FieldValue
nameFederal Territories
native_nameWilayah Persekutuan
image_flagFlag of the Federal Territories of Malaysia.svg
image_sealCoat of arms of Malaysia.svg
flag_linkFlag of the Federal Territories
subdivision_typeFederal territories
subdivision_nameKuala Lumpur
Labuan
Putrajaya
area_total_km2381.65
population_total2,265,100
population_as_ofQ4 2023
population_density_km2auto
established_titleDesignated
established_dateKuala Lumpur: 1 February 1974
Labuan: 16 April 1984
Putrajaya: 1 February 2001
established_title1Consolidated under the Ministry
established_date127 March 2004
image_mapFederal territories in Malaysia (labeled).svg
mapsize250px
postal_code_typeNational postal code
postal_codeKuala Lumpur
50xxx to 60xxx
68xxx (Ampang and Selayang)
Labuan
87xxx
Putrajaya
62xxx
area_codes03a
087b
leader_titleMinister
leader_nameHannah Yeoh
leader_title1Director General
leader_name1Dato' Indera Noridah binti Abdul Rahim
website
blank_nameMotto
blank_infoMaju dan Sejahtera
'Progressive and Prosperous'
blank1_nameAnthem
blank1_infoWilayah Persekutuan Maju dan Sejahtera
blank2_nameAdministered by the
blank2_infoFederal Territories Department
blank3_nameLicense plate
blank3_infoKuala Lumpur
W and V
Labuan
L
Putrajaya
PUTRAJAYA and F
footnotesa Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya
b Labuan

Labuan Putrajaya Labuan: 16 April 1984 Putrajaya: 1 February 2001 50xxx to 60xxx 68xxx (Ampang and Selayang) Labuan 87xxx Putrajaya 62xxx 087b 'Progressive and Prosperous' W and V Labuan L Putrajaya PUTRAJAYA and F b Labuan

The federal territories (FT; ) in Malaysia comprise three territories—Kuala Lumpur, Labuan, and Putrajaya—governed directly by the Federal Government of Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur is the national capital of Malaysia, Putrajaya the administrative capital, and Labuan an offshore international financial centre. Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya are enclaves in the state of Selangor. Labuan is an island off the coast of the Sabah state.

Administrations

The territories fall under the jurisdiction of the Department of Federal Territories. Originally, the Federal Territory (FT) Ministry was established in 1979 and was in charge of planning and administration of Kuala Lumpur and Klang Valley. In 1981, the FT Ministry was re-established under the Prime Minister's Department as the Planning Unit of Klang Valley. In 2004, the FT Ministry was again formed into a full-fledged ministry which focused on the development of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya. In 2022, under Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim's administration, the ministry was scrapped and its functions delegated to other ministries. Currently, the federal territories are administered by the Department of the Federal Territories (Jabatan Wilayah Persekutuan) under the Prime Minister's Department.

History

The federal territories were originally part of two states: Selangor and Sabah. Both Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya were part of Selangor and Labuan was part of Sabah.

Kuala Lumpur, the state capital of Selangor then, became the national capital of the Federation of Malaya (and later Malaysia) in 1948. Since independence in 1957, the federal as well as the Selangor state ruling party had been the Alliance (later the Barisan Nasional). However, in the 1969 elections the Alliance, while retaining control of the federal government, lost its majority in Selangor to the opposition. The same election resulted in a major race riot in Kuala Lumpur.

It was realised that if Kuala Lumpur remained part of Selangor, clashes between the federal government and Selangor state government might arise when they are controlled by different parties. The solution was to separate Kuala Lumpur from the state and place it under direct federal rule. On 1 February 1974, the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur Agreement was signed, and Kuala Lumpur became the first federal territory of Malaysia.

The cession of Kuala Lumpur secured the Selangor state government for the Barisan Nasional until the 2008 general election. The separation of Kuala Lumpur meant that Kuala Lumpur voters lost representation in the Selangor State Legislative Assembly and could only vote for representation in the Parliament of Malaysia.

Labuan, an island off the coast of mainland Sabah, was chosen by the federal government for development into an offshore financial centre. Labuan became the second federal territory in 16 April 1984.

Putrajaya is a planned city, designed to replace Kuala Lumpur as the seat of the federal government. Sultan Salahuddin of Selangor, who was serving as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong at that time, was asked again to cede land to the federal government. Putrajaya became the third federal territory on 1 February 2001.

In recent years, efforts have been made to forge a common identity for the three federal territories. A flag of the Federal Territories was introduced on 23 May 2006 to represent the federal territories as a whole. During the 2006 Sukma Games in Kedah, Kuala Lumpur, Labuan, and Putrajaya (never competed) debuted as a unified Federal Territories team.

Symbols

Main article: Flag of the Federal Territories

Maju dan Sejahtera () is the official anthem of the federal territories.

In addition to the flag of federal territories, each federal territory also has its own flag.

Image:Flag of Kuala Lumpur Malaysia.svg|Flag of Kuala Lumpur Image:Flag of Labuan.svg|Flag of Labuan Image:Flag of Putrajaya.svg|Flag of Putrajaya

Sports

Since 2006, sport activities in all three federal territories are governed and coordinated by the Federal Territory Sports Council (, WIPERS), a federal statutory body.

Holidays

Main article: Federal Territory Day

In addition to federal public holidays, all three federal territories celebrate Federal Territory Day. Labuan, with a significant Kadazan-Dusun community, celebrates Kaamatan with the neighbouring state of Sabah.

Federal Parliament seats

The federal territories representatives in the Federal Parliament (Dewan Rakyat) since the 15th general election are:

ParliamentSeat NameMember of ParliamentPartyAreaP114P115P116P117P118P119P120P121P122P123P124P125P166
KepongLim Lip EngPakatan Harapan (DAP)Kuala Lumpur
BatuPrabakaran ParameswaranPakatan Harapan (PKR)
Wangsa MajuZahir HassanPakatan Harapan (PKR)
SegambutHannah Yeoh Tseow SuanPakatan Harapan (DAP)
SetiawangsaNik Nazmi Nik AhmadPakatan Harapan (PKR)
TitiwangsaJohari Abdul GhaniBarisan Nasional (UMNO)
Bukit BintangFong Kui LunPakatan Harapan (DAP)
Lembah PantaiAhmad Fahmi Mohamed FadzilPakatan Harapan (PKR)
SeputehTeresa Kok Suh SimPakatan Harapan (DAP)
CherasTan Kok WaiPakatan Harapan (DAP)
Bandar Tun RazakWan Azizah Wan IsmailPakatan Harapan (PKR)
PutrajayaMohd Radzi Md JidinPerikatan Nasional (PPBM)Putrajaya
LabuanSuhaili Abdul RahmanIndependentLabuan

References

References

  1. (16 July 2021). "Kementerian Wilayah Persekutuan – Latar Belakang".
  2. Kaur, Dashveenjit. (31 January 2019). "The journey of Putrajaya — Malaysia's jewel capital city". The Malaysian Reserve.
  3. "Road to Nationhood".
  4. Encyclopaedia Britannica. "Kuala Lumpur".
  5. (24 May 2006). "Official flag for all three FTs unveiled".
  6. "Majlis Sukan Wilayah Persekutuan".
Wikipedia Source

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