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Country profile: Malaysia

Map of Malaysia

Malaysia boasts one of south-east Asia's most vibrant economies, the fruit of decades of industrial growth and political stability.

Its multi-ethnic, multi-religious society encompasses a majority Muslim population in most of its states and an economically-powerful Chinese community.

Overview

Consisting of two regions separated by some 640 miles of the South China Sea, Malaysia is a federation of 13 states and three federal territories.

It is one of the region's key tourist destinations, offering excellent beaches and brilliant scenery. Dense rainforests in the eastern states of Sarawak and Sabah, on the island of Borneo, are a refuge for wildlife and tribal traditions.

Downtown area and Petronas towers, Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia made the transformation from a farm-based economy

Ethnic Malays comprise some 60% of the population. Chinese constitute around 26%; Indians and indigenous peoples make up the rest. The communities coexist in relative harmony, although there is little racial interaction.

Although since 1971 Malays have benefited from positive discrimination in business, education and the civil service, ethnic Chinese continue to hold economic power and are the wealthiest community. The Malays remain the dominant group in politics while the Indians are among the poorest.

The country is among the world's biggest producers of computer disk drives, palm oil, rubber and timber. It has a state-controlled car maker, Proton, and tourism has considerable room for expansion.

Malaysia's economic prospects have been dented by the global economic downturn, which has hit export markets hard. In March 2009 the government unveiled a $16bn economic stimulus plan as it sought to stave off a deep recession.

The country also faces other serious challenges - politically, in the form of sustaining stability in the face of religious differences and the ethnic wealth gap, and, environmentally, in preserving its valuable forests.

Malaysia's human rights record has come in for international criticism. Internal security laws allow suspects to be detained without charge or trial.

Facts

  • Full name: Federation of Malaysia
  • Population: 27.5 million (UN, 2009)
  • Capital: Kuala Lumpur
  • Area: 329,847 sq km (127,355 sq miles)
  • Major languages: Malay (official), English, Chinese dialects, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam
  • Major religions: Islam, Buddhism, Taoism, Hinduism, Christianity, Sikhism
  • Life expectancy: 72 years (men), 77 years (women)
  • Monetary unit: 1 ringgit = 100 sen
  • Main exports: Electronic equipment, petroleum and liquefied natural gas, chemicals, palm oil, wood and wood products, rubber, textiles
  • GNI per capita: US $6,970 (World Bank, 2008)
  • Internet domain: .my
  • International dialling code: +60

Leaders

Head of state: Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin

Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin was installed as Malaysia's 13th king in December 2006.

Malaysian king, Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin
Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin's role is mainly ceremonial

The sultan is a former ruler of oil-rich Terengganu state. He was 44 when he was sworn in.

The king's role is largely ceremonial, although he is nominal head of the armed forces and all laws and the appointment of every cabinet minister require his assent.

Under Malaysia's constitutional monarchy, the position of king is rotated every five years between each of the nine hereditary state rulers.

Malaysia's first prime minister, Tunku Abdul Rahman, himself a prince, devised the system after independence in 1957 to spread power among the sultans and rajas who had ruled over fiefdoms on the Malay peninsula for hundreds of years.

Prime minister: Najib Abdul Razak

Najib Razak was guaranteed the post of prime minister in March 2009 when he became the leader of the United Malays National Organisation, the main party in the National Front ruling coalition.

Incoming Malaysian premier Najib Abdul Razak
Like his predecessor, Mr Najib came to the job promising reforms

The son of the country's second prime minister and nephew of the third, Mr Najib is regarded by many Malaysians as political blue blood and seems to have been destined for the premiership from an early age.

A British-trained economist, he first entered parliament at the age of 23 - becoming the youngest MP in Malaysian history - and quickly rose to prominence.

He has held numerous cabinet posts, including finance and defence, and was most recently deputy to outgoing Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi.

He took over the premiership at a turbulent time, and faces the enormous challenge of steering the country through the global financial crisis, which has hit the economy hard.

Mr Najib pledged radical reforms and a more transparent government. He said that one of his priorities would be to close a widening ethnic and religious divide, after Malaysia's ethnic minorities shifted towards the opposition in large numbers in the 2008 polls, fearing their rights were being eroded.

But his rise to power has been marked by a government crackdown on the resurgent opposition, with allegations that strong-arm tactics are being used to stifle political dissent.

His predecessor, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, resigned as prime minister in April 2009 after the governing coalition suffered a heavy defeat in a general election in March 2008.

Media

Malaysia has some of the toughest censorship laws in the world. The authorities exert substantial control over the media and can impose restrictions in the name of national security.

Malaysian media tycoon Tiong Hiew King
Malaysian media tycoon Tiong Hiew King reads a copy of the Chinese-language daily Nanyang Siang Pau

The government is keen to insulate the largely-Muslim population from what it considers harmful foreign influences on TV. News is subject to censorship, entertainment shows and music videos regularly fall foul of the censors, and scenes featuring swearing and kissing are routinely removed from TV programmes and films.

The TV sector comprises commercial networks and pay-TV operations. Around a quarter of TV households subscribe to the Astro multichannel service. Pay-TV operators MiTV and Fine TV entered the market in 2005. TV3 is the leading national private, terrestrial broadcaster.

State-owned Radio Television Malaysia (RTM) operates two TV networks and many of the country's radio services. Private stations are on the air, broadcasting in Malay, Tamil, Chinese and English.

Newspapers must renew their publication licences annually, and the home minister can suspend or revoke publishing permits.

Some web sites, such as Laman Reformasi, close to former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim, freeMalaysia and Malaysiakini, have attracted official criticism.

The press

Television

Radio

News agency

  • Bernama - state-run


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A GUIDE TO ASIA-PACIFIC

 

 

Compiled by BBC Monitoring

SEE ALSO
Profile: Najib Abdul Razak
02 Apr 09 |  Asia-Pacific
Malaysian opposition media banned
23 Mar 09 |  Asia-Pacific
Malaysia acts to bolster economy
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Malaysia's visions of a more equal future
08 Jan 09 |  Special Reports
Malaysia rejects Christian appeal
30 May 07 |  Asia-Pacific
Malaysian oil plan gets partners
28 May 07 |  Business
Anwar shakes up Malaysia politics
01 May 07 |  Asia-Pacific
Malaysian graft official dropped
31 Mar 07 |  Asia-Pacific
Delay to US-Malaysia trade deal
23 Mar 07 |  Business
Malaysia dishes out to raise profile
04 Nov 06 |  Asia-Pacific
Malaysia focused on 2020 vision
01 Jun 06 |  Business

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