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On 6 July 1946, the British Army handed back administrative authority to the British Resident in Brunei after World War II, returning the structure of the Brunei Police Force to its pre-war state. The Straits Settlements Police Force's Assistant Superintendent H. J. Spinks was named CPO and served as the PPB's commander from 1946 to 1949.
The State Mufti and Attorney General were included in the cabinet and declared ministry-level positions in the reshuffles of 2005, [11] 2010, [7] 2015, [12] and 2018. [ 13 ] The 2005 cabinet line-up saw the introduction of new ministerial posts, namely Senior Minister in the Prime Minister's Office, Minister of Energy in the Prime Minister's ...
This is a list of government ministries of Brunei. Ministries are the primary executive branches of the Government of Brunei. There are thirteen ministries, which include: [1] [2] Prime Minister's Office; Ministry of Finance and Economy; Ministry of Defence; Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Ministry of Home Affairs; Ministry of Education; Ministry ...
Abdul Mokti bin Haji Mohd Daud (born 1946/1947) [1] is a Bruneian retired politician and diplomat who served as the Deputy Minister of Religious Affairs (MoRA) from 2015 to 2018, and Minister at the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) from 2018 to 2022.
3 March – First match day of the 2023 Brunei Super League was played. 21 March – Commissioning ceremony of KDB As-Siddiq at Jetty Bravo, Muara Naval Base. [3] [4]
The Ministry of Home Affairs (MoHA; Malay: Kementerian Hal Ehwal Dalam Negeri, KHEDN) is a cabinet-level ministry in the government of Brunei which is responsible for the country's administrative divisions, municipal areas, immigration, labour, fire and rescue services, prison and rehabilitation institutions, and national disaster management.
The ministry was previously known as the Ministry of Industry and Primary Resources (MIPR; Kementerian Perindustrian dan Sumber-Sumber Utama) until the renaming to its present name to reflect functional restructuring, in which oversight for the petroleum and non-primary industries has been transferred, at that time to the Prime Minister's Office.
The history of the ministry began in 2005 with the establishment of the Energy Division, then under the Prime Minister's Office. [2] In May 2011, the Energy Department was established with the restructuring of the Energy Division and the then Petroleum Unit, and in October 2015 it was renamed the Energy and Industry Department after the transfer of oversight on the industry sector from the ...