International treaty
The Malaysia Bill is an annex of the Agreement relating to Malaysia between United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland , Federation of Malaya , North Borneo , Sarawak and Singapore. It gave effect to the Agreement where that the British colonies of North Borneo, Sarawak and the State of Singapore should be federated with the existing States of the Federation of Malaya and the name of the federation should be Malaysia ,[ 2] and the Federal constitution wherewith to amend and adopt the Constitution of the Federation of Malaya so as to provide for the admission of those States. it adopted its present name, the name of the Constitution of the Federation of Malaya should be changed into Constitution of Malaysia .[ 3]
Documents
The following is the table of contents to the Malaysia Bill.
Part I Preliminary
Part II The States of the Federation
Part III General Constitutional Arrangements
Title I General Provisions as to Federal and State Institutions
Chapter 1—Preliminary
Chapter 2—Heads of State
Chapter 3—Parliament, Legislative Assemblies and State Constitutions
Chapter 4—The Judiciary
Title II Citizenship
Chapter 1—Citizenship by operation of law
Chapter 2—Citizenship by registration or naturalisation, and transfer to or from Singapore
Chapter 3—Miscellaneous
Title III Legislative Powers and Administrative Arrangements
Title IV Financial Provisions
Chapter 1—Borneo States
Chapter 2—Singapore
Chapter 3—General
Title V Public Services
Title VI Protection of Special Interests
Chapter 1—General
Chapter 2—Borneo States
Chapter 3—Singapore
Title VII Supplementary
Part IV Transitional and Temporary
Chapter 1—General
Chapter 2—State officers
Chapter 3—The courts and the judiciary
Chapter 4—Parliament and Legislative Assemblies
Schedules
First delimitation of constituencies
First Schedule Insertion of new Articles in Constitution
Second Schedule Section added to Eighth Schedule to Constitution
Third Schedule—Citizenship (amendment of Second Schedule to Constitution)
Fourth Schedule—Special Legislative Lists for Borneo States and Singapore
Fifth Schedule—Additions for Borneo States to Tenth Schedule (Grants and assigned revenues) to Constitution
Sixth Schedule—Minor and consequential amendments of Constitution
Definitions
For the purpose of the federal and state institutions,
"Attorney-General " means the Attorney-General of the Federation
"Chief minister " and "Mentri Besar" both mean the president , by whatever style known, of the executive council in a state (and in particular "chief minister " includes the prime minister in Singapore )
"Executive Council " means the Cabinet or other body, however called, which in the government of a State corresponds, whether or not the members of it are Ministers, to the Cabinet of Ministers in the government of the Federation (and in particular includes the Supreme Council in Sarawak )
"Governor " means the Head of State , by whatever style known, in a State not having a Ruler (and in particular includes the Yang di-Pertua Negara in North Borneo and the Yang di-Pertuan Negara in Singapore )
"Legislative Assembly " means the representative assembly , however called, in the Legislature of a State (and in particular includes the Council Negri in Sarawak ), but except in the Eighth Schedule includes also a Legislative Council , however called
States of the federation
Part II enshrines name and number of the basic States of the federation
The name of the federation shall be known, in Malay and in English , by the name Malaysia .
The States of the Federation shall be—
the States of Malaya , namely, Johor , Kedah , Kelantan , Malacca , Negeri Sembilan , Pahang , Penang , Perak , Perlis , Selangor and Terengganu ; and
the Borneo States , namely, North Borneo and Sarawak ; and
the State of Singapore .
The Heads of State
The Chapter 2 of the General Constitutional Arrangements provides that the Governors of North Borneo , Sarawak and Singapore shall be members of the Conference of Rulers .[ 2] Its main responsibility is the election of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong except for those purposes for which the Governors of Malacca and Penang are not members and became substituted the words "States not having a Ruler".
See also
References
This article incorporates text published under the British Open Government Licence v3.0: "Malaysia Act 1963" . Retrieved 30 March 2021 .
This article incorporates text published under the British Open Government Licence v3.0: Affecting the Malaysia Act 1963
External links