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This is a list of schools located in Kedah, Malaysia. It is categorised according to the variants of schools in Malaysia, and is arranged alphabetically. This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items. (August 2008) Chinese Independent High School Sin Min High School (Sungai Petani) Sin Min High School (Alor Setar) Keat Hwa High School Islamic religious schools Primary ...
2. Kedah 3. Pulau Pinang 4. Perak 5. Selangor 6. Kuala Lumpur 7. Negeri Sembilan 8. Melaka 9. Johor 10. Pahang 11. Terengganu 12. Kelantan 13. Sabah 14. Sarawak 15. Labuan 16. Kumpulan Latihan Malaysia 17. Kumpulan Latihan Kelanasiswa Malaysia
Almanak keputusan pilihan raya umum: Parlimen & Dewan Undangan Negeri, 1959-1999. Shah Alam, Selangor: Anzagain. Chin, U.-H. (1996). Chinese politics in Sarawak: A study of the Sarawak United People's Party. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press. Faisal, S. H. (2012). Domination and Contestation: Muslim Bumiputera Politics in Sarawak. Institute ...
Terengganu (qualifying play-off) Matches played: 182: Goals scored: 437 (2.4 per match) Top goalscorer: 20 goals Abdul Hadi Yahya : Biggest home win: Selangor 7–1 Perlis (6 June 2011) Biggest away win: Felda United 2–6 Terengganu (6 July 2011) Highest scoring: Perak 5–3 Kuala Lumpur (24 April 2011) Selangor 7–1 Perlis (6 June 2011 ...
The following are the members of the Dewan Undangan Negeri or state assemblies, elected in the 2013 state election and by-elections. Also included is the list of the Sarawak state assembly members who were elected in 2016.
The following are the members of the Dewan Undangan Negeri or state assemblies, elected in the 2022 state elections which was part of the 2022 Malaysian general elections. ...
On 13 March 2022, MUDA won one seat in the first election it contested. MUDA Secretary General Amira Aisya won the Puteri Wangsa seat. President of MUDA Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman described the victory in the seat out of the seven seats contested as the party's first step to continue to gain a foothold in the country's political landscape. [31]
These states were Johor, Kedah, Kelantan, Perlis, and Terengganu. In contrast with the four adjoining Federated Malay States of Selangor, Perak, Pahang, and Negeri Sembilan, the five Unfederated Malay States lacked common institutions, and did not form a single state in international law; they were in fact standalone British protectorates.