Thursday, January 6, 2011

BHUTAN



                               BHUTAN

The small country of Bhutan lies along the lofty ridges of the eastern Himalayas in south-central Asia. It is landlocked between India, on the east, south, and west, and the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, to the north—a location that gives it considerable geopolitical significance. It was long isolated from the mainstream of world affairs by dense, steamy jungles in the south and rugged, snow-covered mountains in the north, as well as by the preference of its rulers. Bhutan now finds itself poised between the old and the new. It has begun to modernize and to open the country to outside influences while taking care to preserve its traditional culture and its unspoiled natural environment. It has also transformed itself from an absolute monarchy to a democratic constitutional monarchy. The capital and largest town is Thimphu.

Land and Climate
Bhutan has an area of about 14,824 square miles (38,394 square kilometers). It may be divided into three geographic regions—the Great Himalayas in the north, the Lesser Himalayas in the center, and the Duars Plain in the south. The snowcapped peaks of the Great Himalayas reach heights of more than 24,000 feet (7,300 meters). Only small numbers of people live in this cold, rugged area. The Lesser Himalayas is a region with lower mountains and fertile valleys that are relatively flat and broad and fairly well cultivated and populated. The Duars Plain is a narrow strip of land along the southern border. Much of it has extremely heavy rainfall of from 200 to 300 inches (500 to 760 centimeters) a year and is hot, humid, and covered with dense semitropical forest. This region also has savannas and land used for farming. Numerous rivers cut through the mountains in the north, flow southward through the country, and eventually join the Brahmaputra River in India.
More than two thirds of the land in Bhutan is forested. The different types of forests are home to a very diverse array of plant and animal species. Among the many wild animals are elephants, tigers, leopards, rhinoceroses, monkeys (including the golden langur), bears, red pandas, deer, water buffalo, and many kinds of birds.

People and Culture
Bhutan is a largely rural country, with nearly 70 percent of the people living in very small, scattered villages and only 30 percent living in towns. The largest ethnic group, the Bhutia (Ngalops) make up about half the country's population and live mainly in northern, central, and western Bhutan. Their ancestors came to Bhutan from Tibet starting in the 9th century AD. They speak various Tibetan dialects, one of which, Dzongkha, is the official language of Bhutan. They practice a form of Mahayana Buddhism, the country's official religion. The Sharchops, who live in the east, also follow Mahayana Buddhism. They account for about 15 percent of the population. People of Nepalese origins live in the south. Their religion is Hinduism, and their chief language is Nepali. The Nepalese make up some 35 percent of the country's people.

Economy
Agriculture and forestry are the main occupations in Bhutan. Farmers raise livestock and grow such crops as rice, corn (maize), oranges, and potatoes. A significant portion of Bhutan's income comes from exporting hydroelectricity (waterpower) to India. Construction and tourism are also important. Chief manufactures include chemicals, cement, wood products, processed foods, and iron alloys. Cottage industries make matches, soap, textiles, carpets, and candles.
Although paved highways connect various parts of the country, yaks, mules, and ponies are still used as a mode of transportation on rough mountain trails. There is an airport at Paro. Trekking tours became popular after the country was opened for limited amounts of tourism in 1974.

History
Little is known of Bhutan's early history. For much of the 19th century the country was plagued by a series of civil wars. Its rulers kept it closed to foreigners until well into the 20th century. Nevertheless, in 1865 it began allowing the British, who then ruled India, to guide its international affairs in exchange for an annual subsidy. Later, in 1949, Bhutan established a similar relationship with newly independent India instead of Britain.
Bhutan was united under the Wangchuk Dynasty of hereditary monarchs in 1907. The third king in this line, Jigme Dorji Wangchuk, began a series of development projects in the 1950s and '60s to modernize the country's social system and economy, outlawing slavery and building roads, hospitals, and schools. In 1971 the country ended its international isolation and joined the United Nations.
The fourth king, Jigme Singye Wangchuk, who came to power in 1972, furthered the modernization programs but also sought to protect Bhutan's cultural heritage. In 1988 the country began requiring its people, including those of Nepalese Hindu origins, to adhere to certain Bhutia Buddhist traditions. The country also tightened its immigration laws. Violence broke out in 1990, and many thousands of Bhutan's Nepalese fled to Nepal. Some 100,000 of them took up what became long-term residence in refugee camps there.
The fourth king also steered Bhutan toward democratic government, giving up some of the monarchy's power in the late 1990s. As part of the transformation, he stepped down in 2006 and his son, Jigme Khesar Namgyal Wangchuk, became king. The country became a democracy, and its first elections were held in December 2007, to the upper house of a newly created parliament. The first elections to the lower house of parliament were held in March 2008. Population (2007 estimate), 658,000.

  • MLA Style:   "Bhutan." Britannica Student Library. Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite.  Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2010.
  • APA Style:   Bhutan. (2010). Britannica Student Library. Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite.  Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica.

Monday, December 13, 2010

BRUNEI



                             BRUNEI

A small Islamic sultanate, Brunei is one of the few remaining countries in the world without personal income tax. Located on the northwestern coast of the island of Borneo, it was a powerful state in the 16th century, with authority over the whole island.
Brunei has an area of 2,226 square miles (5,765 square kilometers). The sultanate is bounded on the north by the South China Sea and on its landlocked sides by the Malaysian state of Sarawak. The geographic position of Sarawak also divides Brunei into two separate portions.
The climate in this hilly and rugged country is determined by the equatorial monsoons, or rain-bearing winds. Rainfall is heavy and is distributed throughout the year. Annual precipitation varies from 100 inches (250 centimeters) in the coastal areas to more than 200 inches (500 centimeters) in parts of the interior. Temperatures average between 76° and 86°  F (24° and 30°  C). Dense tropical rain forests cover three fourths of the country and are characterized by a variety of hardwood species. Brunei's animal life includes lions, tigers, monkeys, birds, insects, snakes, and lizards.
The principal language is Malay, but Chinese and English are widely spoken. Most of the people live near the petroleum fields at Seria and Kuala Belait. Brunei is a major petroleum producer and enjoys one of the highest standards of living in Southeast Asia. The state's economy depends almost entirely on its petroleum production.
The largest concentration of urban population is in Brunei's capital, Bandar Seri Begawan (population, 1999, 85,000). Whereas wooden houses are found in the rural areas, Bandar Seri Begawan has modern apartment buildings, hotels, a shopping center, a commercial center, and port facilities. Alongside the modern section of the capital is the older section known as Kampong Ayer, where people live in small houses on stilts along the inlets of a broad, winding river. These houses are interconnected by footbridges, and small boats provide transport. Since roads are poorly developed, rivers are the main means of transportation in Brunei. At Bandar Seri Begawan is an international airport.
Brunei's economy is based on the exploitation of petroleum and natural gas. Agricultural and forestry products include rubber, pepper, wood, and cork and account for about 1 percent of the export earnings. Other agricultural products, including rice, sago (a starch), and local fruits, are grown on a small scale.
Brunei became a British protectorate under treaties made with its sultan in the 19th century, when the state was troubled by piracy. The sultan signed a new treaty in 1979, making Brunei a fully sovereign and independent state on Jan. 1, 1984. Population (2002), 351,000.

  • MLA Style:   "Brunei." Britannica Student Library. Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite.  Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2010.
  • APA Style:   Brunei. (2010). Britannica Student Library. Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite.  Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

MYANMAR


                      MYANMAR

The Union of Myanmar, known as Burma until 1989, is the land of the great Irrawaddy, or Ayeyarwady, River. Most of the country's people live in the fertile lowlands drained by the river. Myanmar is bordered by China to the north and northeast, Laos to the east, Thailand to the southeast, the Andaman Sea and the Bay of Bengal to the south and southwest, Bangladesh to the west, and India to the northwest. The capital is Naypyidaw, a newly built city chosen by the government in 2006 to replace the historical capital of Yangon (Rangoon).

Land and Climate
  • Mount Popa is an extinct volcano in the Pegu Mountain Range of Myanmar.
Myanmar consists mainly of central lowlands surrounded by mountain ranges that run from north to south. The northern mountains are the highest, reaching an elevation of more than 19,000 feet (5,800 meters) at Mount Hkakabo. Several of Asia's great rivers, including the Irrawaddy, begin in this region. In western Myanmar a series of mountain ranges form the border with India. South of these are the Arakan Mountains, with peaks that rise to almost 13,000 feet (4,000 meters). The highlands of the east include the Shan Plateau, with an average elevation of about 3,000 feet (900 meters). On the south the plateau continues into the Tenasserim Mountains, on Myanmar's narrow southern panhandle between Thailand and the Andaman Sea. The low Pegu Mountains divide the central lowlands into two unequal parts, the larger Irrawaddy Valley and the smaller Sittang Valley. The Salween River flows through the Shan Plateau in a deep, narrow valley.
Most of Myanmar receives heavy rainfall, almost all in summer. The Arakan and Tenasserim regions receive up to 200 inches (500 centimeters) a year. From 60 to 100 inches (150 to 250 centimeters) fall in the Irrawaddy Delta and between 40 and 80 inches (100 and 200 centimeters) in the eastern highlands and in the north. Parts of the central Irrawaddy Valley get less than 40 inches each year.
Almost half of Myanmar is forested. Where rainfall is greatest, tropical, evergreen rain forests are common. Where there is less rainfall, the forests have trees that lose their leaves in the dry season. Teak is the best known of these trees. Mangrove forests rim the Irrawaddy and Sittang deltas and portions of the coasts. Wildlife includes elephants, tigers, leopards, bears, monkeys, snakes, crocodiles, and tropical birds.

People and Culture
Most of the ancestors of Myanmar's people originally came from southwestern China about 2,000 years ago. The Burmans, or Burmese, are the majority ethnic group; they make up about two thirds of the population and live chiefly in the central lowlands and the deltas. They speak Burmese, which is the official language of Myanmar. The largest of the many other indigenous groups are the Karen, who live in the southeastern hills and deltas, and the Shan, of the Shan Plateau. There are small numbers of Chinese and Indian residents.
  • Buddhist monks are highly respected in Myanmar.
Buddhism, the country's dominant religion, was brought from India and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) many centuries ago. The form of Buddhism practiced in Myanmar and in other parts of Southeast Asia is called Theravada. Most of the Burmans, Shan, and Karen are Buddhist, though many of the Karen have converted to Christianity. Most of the hill peoples are animists.
Education is compulsory between ages 5 and 9 (primary school) and is free at primary, lower secondary, and vocational schools. Upper secondary schools and universities charge fees. The University of Yangon and the University of Mandalay are the oldest and best-known institutions of higher education.
Every village in Myanmar has a health unit and access to a hospital. However, the lack of adequate sanitation and a shortage of medicine have contributed to relatively high rates of gastrointestinal diseases, tuberculosis, and malaria.

Economy
Myanmar has a developing economy that is basically agricultural. About two thirds of the labor force works in agriculture, though only about one sixth of the land is under cultivation. Rice is by far the chief crop, planted on about half of the cropland. The country's other crops include sugarcane, peanuts (groundnuts), pulses (peas, beans, and lentils), sesame seeds, onions, corn (maize), and rubber. Northern Myanmar is the center of the Golden Triangle, one of the world's major sources of illicit opium. Cattle, pigs, goats, and poultry are raised for food. Pulses are a leading export, along with fish and hardwoods, especially teak.
Myanmar's industrial sector has been limited by mismanagement and poor infrastructure. A leading industry is the processing of such agricultural goods as rice, sugar, and lumber. Other products include cement, fertilizers, and textiles. Among Myanmar's rich mineral resources are copper, tin, tungsten, lead, zinc, silver, gold, rubies, and jade. The country also produces coal, natural gas, and petroleum; natural gas is an important export.
  • A raft of logs floats on the Irrawaddy (or Ayeyarwady) River at Mandalay, Myanmar.
Transportation is mostly by water or rail, with air service available between the larger cities. The Irrawaddy is navigable for some 900 miles (1,450 kilometers), and the Chindwin, its main tributary, for about 500 miles (800 kilometers) more. Yangon is the chief port.

History
The first human settlements in Myanmar appeared some 11,000 years ago in the Irrawaddy Valley. A group of people known as the Pyu, who spoke a Tibeto-Burman language, established city-kingdoms in northern Myanmar between the 1st century BC and the 9th century AD. To the south of the Pyu were the Mon, speakers of an Austro-Asiatic language, who established their capital at Thaton. In the 9th century the Pyu capital of Halingyi fell to the Nanchao kingdom of southern China. Then another group of Tibeto-Burman speakers, the Burmans, assumed control of northern Myanmar and established a capital at Pagan.
  • Ruins of ancient Buddhist temples stand in Pagan (Bagan), Myanmar.
Myanmar was first united as a single kingdom in 1044 under the Burman ruler Anawrahta. He converted to Theravada Buddhism and helped to make it Myanmar's dominant religion. A Mongol invasion in the late 13th century broke up the Pagan kingdom. Reunification first occurred in the 16th century under the Toungoo dynasty, which lasted fitfully until 1752, when it fell to the Mon. Burman resistance rallied behind the popular leader Alaungpaya, who by 1759 had secured all of Myanmar and founded its last dynasty.
Territorial conflict with the British resulted in a series of wars, and Myanmar fell to the British in 1885. The British called the country Burma and its capital Rangoon. (In the Burmese language, the country had been known as Myanma since the 13th century.) From 1886 to 1937 the British governed Burma as a province of India. The Burmese suffered under British economic policies and resented Britain's refusal to continue state patronage of Buddhism. Burmese peasants rose in rebellion in 1931. In 1937 the British government separated Burma from India. The Japanese occupied Burma during World War II, but British rule was restored after the war. Burma gained its independence in 1948.
Intent on creating a socialist Burma, Gen. Ne Win staged a coup in 1962. His Revolutionary Council nationalized much of the country's commerce and industry while isolating Burma from the outside world. By the late 1980s government corruption and mismanagement had turned resource-rich Burma into one of the world's poorest countries. Public dissatisfaction erupted in 1988 into widespread antigovernment riots. Ne Win stepped down, but within months the military again seized control of the government and suppressed the riots by force. Thousands of unarmed protesters were killed. In 1989 the government changed the country's name from Burma to Myanmar.
  • Buddhist monks protest against Myanmar's military government in Yangon in September 2007. The …
In 1990 Myanmar held its first multiparty elections in more than 30 years. The National League for Democracy, an opposition party, won a landslide victory, but the military government refused to relinquish power. The new assembly was not permitted to convene until 1993. Opposition leaders routinely faced government harassment and jail. The most prominent of them, Aung San Suu Kyi, endured years of house arrest. She was awarded the 1991 Nobel peace prize for her efforts to negotiate for a freer government. The international community condemned the military regime for human rights abuses and its suppression of democracy, but economic sanctions failed to effect change. Population (2006 estimate), 47,383,000.

  • MLA Style:   "Myanmar." Britannica Student Library. Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite.  Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2010.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

MALAYSIA


MALAYSIA
 A nation of Southeast Asia, Malaysia consists of two components: peninsular Malaysia, which is part of mainland Southeast Asia, and the states of Sabah and Sarawak on the island of Borneo. Although there are considerable areas of lowland and coastal plain, much of the country consists of mountainous terrain clothed in dense rainforest. With the exception of Mount Kinabalu in Sabah, elevations are modest—3,000 to 6,000 feet (1,000 to 2,000 meters). Since Malaysia lies entirely between one and seven degrees north of the equator, it experiences a humid equatorial-tropical climate. The capital of Malaysia is Kuala Lumpur.
Peninsular Malaysia covers an area of 50,881 square miles (131,778 square kilometers). Kuala Lumpur occupies a small enclave in the west-central state of Selangor, designated in 1974 as a federal territory. About four fifths of Malaysia's population resides in peninsular Malaysia. The states of Sabah, with an area of 28,424 square miles (73,619 square kilometers), and Sarawak, with an area of 48,050 square miles (124,450 square kilometers), are separated from the peninsula by about 400 miles (640 kilometers) of the South China Sea.
Malaysia is a very significant nation in Southeast Asia, even though it is the smallest in the region except for Singapore and Brunei. Malaysia is one of the world's leading producers of tin, natural rubber, oil palm, and tropical lumber.

Land and Climate
Mountain ranges extend southward from Thailand into peninsular Malaysia. The weathering of granites and other associated rocks has created extensive areas of deep and relatively well-drained soils. Tin-bearing minerals are concentrated in the gravel beds of several of the major river systems. Over the years these rivers have transported much sediment, building extensive areas of coastal alluvial plain—especially along the Strait of Malacca. These areas are either exploited for their swamp forest resources or are drained to become agricultural land, especially for growing rice.
Much of the center of Borneo consists of mountain systems. Sarawak, in the northwest, represents a slightly uplifted basin with its southern portion folded into a series of parallel ridges from southwest to northeast. Its northern portion is a still sedimenting coastal plain under which have been found considerable petroleum resources. The mountain ridges of Sarawak pass northeastward into Sabah, where they form a more compact coastal mountain chain. This culminates in Mount Kinabalu, which at 13,455 feet (4,101 meters) is the highest point between northeastern India and the island of New Guinea.
The Malaysian rainforests are among the world's most biodiverse. However, much of the original forest has been destroyed by weather and by clearing for crop cultivation and livestock grazing. Malaysia is home to a wide variety of animal species, including elephants, tigers, crocodiles, and green sea turtles. Poaching (illegal hunting) as well as habitat loss has severely endangered some of the country's most unusual species, notably the orangutan, the Sumatran rhinoceros, and the proboscis monkey.
Malaysia's equatorial climate is characterized by temperatures and humidity that remain high throughout the year. In Kuala Lumpur the daily minimum and maximum temperatures are about 73° and 90° F (23° and 32° C). Annual rainfall averages about 100 inches (250 centimeters). From November to March a northeasterly airflow predominates, and portions of the country, especially those areas farther from the equator, have a distinct dry season. From May to October a southwesterly flow predominates, and rainfall is widespread.

People and Culture
  • Christ Church in Melaka city, Malaysia
The population of Malaysia, once predominantly rural, is becoming more urban. The major cities—notably Kuala Lumpur, George Town, Ipoh, and Johor Baharu—are expanding rapidly as the Malays and the other native ethnic groups that were previously largely rural are migrating in increasing numbers to urban centers.
Malaysia has great ethnic diversity. In peninsular Malaysia there remain members of groups referred to as the Orang Asli, or aboriginal peoples. Included are several groups of Negritos and Senoi and such others as the Jakun and the Temelai, who may in fact be more closely related to the later Malay arrivals. These peoples are believed to be remnants of groups that have lived in the peninsula for thousands of years but who were driven into remote parts of the mountains and forests by subsequent migrant groups. By the late 1990s, the Orang Asli constituted less than 1 percent of the population.
The later groups began arriving in Southeast Asia from the north in about 2000–1500 BC. They include the Malays in peninsular Malaysia; the Iban, Kayan, Kelabit, Kenyah, Bidayuh, Bisayah, Melanau, and Kelabit in Sarawak; and the Bajau, Kadazan, and Murut in Sabah. These groups, along with the Orang Asli, are generally referred to collectively as the Bumiputra groups, or the “sons of the soil.”
Under colonial rule Chinese—especially from the southern provinces—were encouraged to come to peninsular Malaysia and Sarawak. Indian laborers from South India were also brought to work on the rubber plantations. The Chinese and Indians together make up a large share of the population of peninsular Malaysia, though their proportions in Sarawak and Sabah are much lower.
The Malays of the peninsula were influenced by the Indianized kingdoms of Southeast Asia, though few cultural traces of this Hindu-Buddhist phase remain. During the 15th century Islam entered the region from India by way of northern Sumatra, and the Malay peoples quickly embraced this religion. The social and cultural life of the Malays revolves around their religious obligations and activities. Every village or kampong has its mosque. Malay children are often sent to religious as well as state schools. Many Malays make the hajj, or pilgrimage, to Mecca. The major festival of the year is the celebration marking the end of Ramadan, the Muslim month of fasting.
Chinese and Indian immigrant groups who arrived in the 19th and early 20th centuries brought with them their own languages and religions. Cantonese and Hokkien are the major Chinese dialects used, though several southern dialects are also spoken. Among the Indian community, Tamil is the most widespread language. Malay—formally called Bahasa Malaysia—is the official language and is also the language of instruction in the schools. However, English is used in business and as a lingua franca.

Economy
The production and export of raw materials is a major part of the Malaysian economy. However, the country made great strides in the late 20th century toward diversifying its economy and encouraging the growth of modern industries and services. Most of the labor force works in manufacturing and trade, and these sectors are the largest contributors to the gross domestic product. Finance has also become an important sector. Agriculture employs roughly one sixth of the working population.
  • Latex being tapped from trees on a rubber plantation near Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Natural rubber has long been one of the most significant commercial crops. It is produced mainly in peninsular Malaysia, both from large-scale plantations and from smallholdings. Many of the smallholdings were created beginning in the 1960s in an extensive program of pioneer settlement—the establishing of impoverished families as farmers in government-planned settlement (FELDA) schemes. Palm oil, also from both plantations and smallholders, is the most important commercial crop.
Rice has been cultivated in the region for centuries and remains a staple food item. Most rice cultivators are Malay peasant farmers on smallholdings. Yields and output have increased as a result of irrigation projects such as the Muda Scheme in Kedah and Perlis—and the use of high-yielding rice strains. Annual production of rice contributes greatly to national self-sufficiency. Bananas, cacao, pineapples, and tobacco are also grown, and tropical timber is harvested for export. Peninsular Malaysia, Sarawak, and Sabah share more or less equally in the latter enterprise.
Malaysia is one of the world's leading tin producers. Like most primary products, however, tin faces an uncertain future. Quotas are in force to restrict production. Today, iron ore, bauxite, and copper are mined in greater quantities.
Petroleum is a relatively recent industry, with reserves estimated at more than 3 billion barrels. Production is almost entirely from offshore rigs that lie to the east of peninsular Malaysia and to the north of Sarawak and Sabah. The petroleum fields also contain vast reserves of natural gas.
  • Employees work at an electronics factory on Pinang Island, Malaysia.
In its early days, industrialization in Malaysia was linked to the production and export of industrial materials. Rubber processing, tin smelting, and palm-oil extraction all made their appearance before 1960. In the 1960s a policy of import substitution was initiated, with favorable terms accorded companies that began local industries to serve the Malaysian market. Such major industries as iron and steel, sugar refining, cement production, and fertilizers were begun. In the 1970s there was a policy shift toward encouraging the establishment of export-oriented industries. This led to factories in major urban centers, especially of peninsular Malaysia, that produced components for the international electronics industry. It also spurred the rapid growth of textiles and other manufactured items for sale in Europe and North America. A notable feature of economic policy planning in Malaysia is the attempt to raise the economic status of the country's Malay population, long situated below that of the country's immigrant peoples.
The motor vehicle industry, though dependent on imported parts, forms a substantial component of the industrial sector. In 1985 the government established Proton, a state-owned car manufacturing company. The company was so successful that a second national car company was established in 1992. The cars are marketed primarily to Asia, though there are considerable exports to the United Kingdom.
Malaysia's finance and trade sectors have grown considerably since the late 20th century, thanks to government policies promoting foreign investment and market competition. Banking is regulated by the state-run Bank Negara Malaysia. However, the fiscal crisis that struck Asia in 1997 effected an economic downturn; this, coupled with extravagant government spending and corporate borrowing, produced a large domestic debt.
The trade sector received a boost from the establishment of several free trade zones in the late 20th century. In 1967 Malaysia cofounded the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) with Indonesia, Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand. An economic cooperative, ASEAN promotes regional economic growth, cultural development, and political stability. Since its founding, Brunei, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia have also joined ASEAN.
Peninsular Malaysia has an excellent rail system, which links all of the major towns. The road network is also good and includes two major highways. There are international airports at Kuala Lumpur and Pinang Island in peninsular Malaysia, and at Kota Kinabalu and Kuching in Sabah and Sarawak, respectively. Ferry service and domestic flights connect the two East Malaysian states with the peninsula.

Government
Malaysia is a federal constitutional monarchy. At the federal level there is a bicameral, or two-house, legislature, or parliament. The government is headed by a prime minister, who is chief of the majority party in the Dewan Rakyat, or lower house. The states of Melaka, Pinang, Sarawak, and Sabah have appointed governors who function as constitutional rulers for the state. Each of the other states has a ruler, or sultan, who functions as a constitutional monarch but is also responsible for questions relating to the Muslim religion and the Malay language. The constitutional monarch for the whole federation is the Yang Dipertuan Agung, who serves as chief of state. He is elected by the traditional Malay rulers from among themselves for a term of five years.

History
In the middle of the 1st millennium AD, city-states emerged in Southeast Asia that reflected Hindu and Buddhist influences from India. The lands that now make up Malaysia were at different times affected by these states, but no major Indianized state seems to have existed in Malaysia. In the 15th century Melaka was founded, and shortly thereafter its ruler was converted to Islam. Melaka rapidly became the center of a commercial empire that controlled much of the trade in precious spices from the islands to the east, especially the Moluccas. From Melaka, Islam spread farther to the east, establishing itself in Borneo.
European powers soon began to intrude into the region, each seeking to control the highly profitable spice trade. The Portuguese captured Melaka in 1511. A century later the Dutch replaced the Portuguese. The British were the main rivals of the Dutch, and these two powers remained in contention until after the Napoleonic wars. In 1824 they signed the Anglo-Dutch Treaty, which divided Southeast Asia into spheres of influence that were later to become colonial possessions. By this treaty Britain gave the Dutch all “factories,” or trading posts, in Sumatra, recognized Dutch control over Java, and agreed not to establish posts or enter into treaty relations with rulers of islands “south of the Straits of Singapore.” In return the Dutch agreed to give up all their posts and claims on the Malay peninsula as well as to cede posts in India. This colonial division created the territorial structure of the present-day federation of Malaysia. In addition to developing control over the Malay peninsula, the British established themselves on the northern coast of Borneo—now Sarawak and Sabah—as these areas did not lie south of the Straits of Singapore.
During the 19th century, Britain exercised direct rule over the Straits Settlements—George Town, Melaka, and Singapore, a port founded by Stamford Raffles in 1819. Various Malay sultanates were placed under treaty relationships. James Brooke obtained permission in the 1840s from the sultan of Brunei in Borneo to pacify—and rule—the southwestern part of Sarawak. In North Borneo, later Sabah, the British North Borneo Company was granted a charter in 1846. Resistance to this intensification of colonial rule was widespread, and revolts simmered for years.
Economic change was rapid in the latter part of the 19th century and the start of the 20th. The establishment of British control enabled Chinese tin miners on the Malay peninsula to expand their activities. Large numbers of Chinese laborers flowed into the region to work in the mines. Railroads were constructed to help export the tin. Various types of agricultural and plantation enterprises were established—primarily coffee, tea, and rubber. Rubber was native to the Amazon Basin in South America, but seeds were transported to London in 1876 and from there to Singapore. After experiments in Singapore, rubber was recommended as a plantation crop in Malaya, and plantings expanded rapidly.
The native populations participated in the growing cash economy only to a minor extent. On the peninsula they continued to be hunters, and in the forests they continued to grow irrigated rice and other crops.
As a raw-materials producer, Malaya suffered severely during the years of the Great Depression. In the late 1930s economic conditions improved, but in 1941 Malaya, Sarawak, and Sabah were all invaded by the Japanese and remained under Japanese control until 1945. The British returned after the war to reestablish colonial rule in Malaya and took over Sarawak and Sabah. British plans for independence for its territories met with strong opposition. They included citizenship for both native and immigrant peoples and were perceived as reducing the status of the Malay princely states. The outbreak of a Communist-led insurgency in 1948 also interfered with plans to grant independence. In 1957 Malaya became independent, but Sarawak and Sabah continued as British territories for several years.
In 1963 Britain proposed a federation to incorporate not only Malaya but also Singapore, Sarawak, Sabah, and Brunei. All but Brunei agreed to form the Federation of Malaysia. Singapore withdrew in 1965.
Over the last third of the 20th century the Malays came to dominate the nation's political life. They found it necessary, however, to maintain a political alliance the Barisan Nasional—with elements in Sarawak and Sabah and with Chinese and Indian groups of peninsular Malaysia. The Barisan and its predecessors have held a majority in parliament without interruption since the granting of independence in 1957. Opposition to the Barisan comes from radical factions on the left and on the right.
Civic unrest grew in Malaysia in the early 21st century. Violent clashes between Indians and Malays resulted in dozens of arrests. Strict laws against illegal immigration were enacted to stem the rising number of illegal aliens. The new laws mandated severe punishments for violators, prompting the large-scale emigration of foreign workers. Population (2002), 24,370,000.