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The National Land Code (Malay: Kanun Tanah Negara), is a Malaysian laws which enacted to amend and consolidate the laws relating to land and land tenure, the registration of title to land and of dealings therewith and the collection of revenue therefrom within the States of Johore, Kedah, Kelantan, Malacca, Negeri Sembilan, Pahang, Penang, Perak, Perlis, Selangor, Terengganu and the Federal ...
National Institute for Scientific and Industrial Research (Incorporation) Act 1971: 48 Repealed by Act 157 National Kenaf and Tobacco Board Act 2009: 692 In force National Land Code (Penang And Malacca Titles) Act 1963: 518 In force National Land Code (Validation) Act 2003: 625 In force
National Land Code (Penang And Malacca Titles) Act 1963 [Act 518] Central Bank Of Malaysia Act 1958 [Act 519] ( Repealed by the Central Bank Of Malaysia Act 2009 [Act 701] ) Lembaga Pembangunan Industri Pembinaan Malaysia Act 1994 [Act 520] Domestic Violence Act 1994 [Act 521] Control of Padi and Rice Act 1994 [Act 522]
National Land Code (Malaysia) National Language Act 1963/67; National Parks Act 1980 (Malaysia) National Security Council Act 2016; O. Occupational Safety and Health ...
In Peninsular Malaysia, a district is a subdivision of a state.A mukim (commune, sub-district or parish) is a subdivision of a district.The National Land Code assigns land matters, including the delineation of districts, to the purview of state governments. [1]
Land Conservation Act 1960 [Act 385] Interpretation Acts 1948 and 1967 (Consolidated and Revised 1989) [Act 388] Land Acquisition Act 1960 [Act 486] Padi Cultivators (Control of Rent and Security of Tenure) Act 1967 [Act 528] Land (Group Settlement Areas) Act 1960 [Act 530] National Land Code (Validation) Act 2003 [Act 625] Mineral and Geoscience
National Land Code (Malaysia) This page was last edited on 8 October 2020, at 01:25 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
The position advanced by the Selangor State government (before the withdrawal of appeal) in the Sagong Tasi case was that the Orang Asli are generally considered mere tenants of their unregistered ancestral land, since under the 1965 National Land Code, all land belongs to the respective states, or in case of federal territories, the federal ...