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Karanganyar is a town and the capital of Karanganyar Regency. The town is located in the Central Java, Indonesia. Administrative villages
The Sarawak government is popularly believed to exert its influence over the media. [49] [note 5] Examples of newspapers based in Sarawak are Sin Chew Daily, [65] See Hua Daily News, Borneo Post, and Utusan Borneo. [66] In the 1990s, major newspapers negatively portrayed the timber blockades in Sarawak as detrimental to the state's growth and ...
A precedent was set in 2001 when an Iban village of Rumah Nor won a court victory against Borneo Pulp and Paper and the Sarawak Government for violating their Native Customary Right (NCR) or adat. The victory was recently publicised in a short documentary, named Rumah Nor , by the Borneo Project. [ 44 ]
The Ukit, also known as Bhuket are a tribe found in Sarawak, Malaysia. They are a small minority people who until recently were nomads in the rain forests of Borneo. Some were settled at Rumah Ukit on the upper reaches of the Batang Balui or Balui River. Most of the Ukits are found in the Upper Rajom and Tatau rivers, Baleh, Sarawak.
Nanga Entulang is a settlement in the Sri Aman District of Sarawak, Malaysia. [1] [2] It is on the southeast bank of the Batang Lupar river, and includes the eponymous stream Sungai Entulang. [2] The word nanga means "stream mouth". [1] Neighbouring settlements include: [2] Rumah Sandai 1.4 kilometres (0.87 mi) west; Skra 2.6 kilometres (1.6 mi ...
Key locations along their migration route include Melanjan in the Kapuas Valley, Pangkalan Tubau near the Kalimantan-Sarawak border and Lubok Antu, their first major settlement in Sarawak. The migration narrative highlights influential figures such as Lau Moa, a migration leader and ancestral chiefs like Ambau, Mawar Biak and Mawar Tuai, who ...
Karanganyar may refer to: Karanganyar Regency, a regency of Central Java, Indonesia; Karanganyar, Karanganyar, town, district and the capital of Karanganyar Regency, ...
Punan Bah or Punan [1] is an ethnic group found in Sarawak, Malaysia and Kalimantan, Indonesia. [2] The Punan Bah people are distinct and unrelated to the semi-nomadic Penan people.