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FEDERAL CONSTITUTION
As at 1 November 2010

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PREAMBLE

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We, the sovereign Malaysian people, imploring the aid of Almighty god, in order to build a just and humane society and establish a government that shall embody our ideals and aspirations, promote the common good, conserve and develop our patrimony, and secure to ourselves and our posterity the blessings of independence and democracy under the rule of law and a regime of truth, justice, freedom, love, equality and peace, do hereby adopt, enact, and give to ourselves this Constitution.

PART I
THE STATES, FLAG, ANTHEM, PRINCIPLES, STATE POLICIES, AND LAW OF THE FEDERATION

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Article 1: Name, States and territories of the Federation

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(1) The Federation shall be a sovereign republic to be known as the Federal Republic of Malaysia.
(2) The States of the Federation shall be—
(a) the States of Malaya, namely, Johor, Kedah, Kelantan, Malacca, Negeri Sembilan, Pahang, Penang, Perak, Perlis, Selangor and Terengganu;
(b) the Borneo States, namely, Brunei, Sabah and Sarawak;
(c) the State of Singapore; and
(d) the Philippine States, namely, Ilocos, Cagayan Valley, Central Luzon, Southern Tagalog, Bicol, Western Visayas, Central Visayas, Eastern Visayas, Western Mindanao, Northern Mindanao, and Southern Mindanao.
(3) Subject to Clause (4), the territories of each of the States mentioned in Clause (2) are the territories comprised therein immediately before Malaysia Day.
(4) The territory of the State of Selangor shall exclude the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur established under the Constitution (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 1973, the territory of the State of Southern Tagalog shall exclude the Federal Territory of Metropolitan Manila established under the Constitution (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 1973, and the territory of the State of Sabah shall exclude the Federal Territory of Labuan established under the Constitution (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 1984, and all such Federal Territories shall be territories of the Federation.

Article 2: Admission of new territories into the Federation

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Parliament may by law—
(a) admit other States to the Federation;
(b) alter the boundaries of any State,
but a law altering the boundaries of a State shall not be passed without the consent of that State (expressed by a law made by the Legislature of that State) and of the Conference of Rulers and Governors.

Article 3: Flag and Anthem of the Federation

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(1) The Flag of the Federation shall be rectangular; its length is half its width. It consists of two equal horizontal sections, blue above red, and a white equilateral triangle extending from the hoist. The triangle contains a golden eight-rayed sun at its centre and three golden stars, one at each corner; and each of its sides is as long as the length of the flag.
(2) The Anthem of the Federation shall be the composition consisting of the words and music specified in the Third Schedule.

Article 3A: Principles and State Policies of the Federation

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The provisions of the Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines 1935, as in force immediately before Malaysia Day shall, to the extent specified in the Twelfth Schedule, have effect as part of this Constitution for the purposes of declaring the Principles and State Policies of the Federation.

Article 4: Supreme law of the Federation

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(1) This Constitution is the supreme law of the Federation and any law passed after Merdeka Day which is inconsistent with this Constitution shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void.
(2) The validity of any law shall not be questioned on the ground that—
(a) it imposes restrictions on the right mentioned in Clause (2) of Article 9 but does not relate to the matters mentioned therein; or
(b) it imposes such restrictions as are mentioned in Clause (2) of Article 10 but those restrictions were not deemed necessary or expedient by Parliament for the purposes mentioned in that Article.
(3) The validity of any law made by Parliament or the Legislature of any State shall not be questioned on the ground that it makes provision with respect to any matter with respect to which Parliament or, as the case may be, the Legislature of the State has no power to make laws, except in proceedings for a declaration that the law is invalid on that ground or—
(a) if the law was made by Parliament, in proceedings between the Federation and one or more States;
(b) if the law was made by Legislature of a State, in proceedings between the Federation and that State.
(4) Proceedings for a declaration that a law is invalid on the ground mentioned in Clause (3) (not being proceedings falling within paragraph (a) or (b) of the Clause) shall not be commenced without the leave of a judge of the Federal Court; and the Federation shall be entitled to be a party to any such proceedings, and so shall any State that would or might be a party to proceedings brought for the same purpose under paragraph (a) or (b) of the Clause.

PART II
FUNDAMENTAL LIBERTIES

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Article 5: Liberty of the person

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(1) No person shall be deprived of his life or personal liberty save in accordance with law.
(2) Where complaint is made to a High court or any judge thereof that a person is being unlawfully detained the court shall inquire into the complaint and, unless satisfied that the detention is lawful, shall order him to be produced before the court and release him.
(3) Where a person is arrested he shall be informed as soon as may be of the grounds of his arrest and shall be allowed to consult and be defended by a legal practitioner of his choice.
(4) Where a person is arrested and not released he shall without unreasonable delay, and in any case within twenty-four hours (excluding the time of any necessary journey) be produced before a magistrate and shall not be further detained in custody without the magistrate's authority.
(5) Clauses (3) and (4) do not apply to—
(a) an enemy alien; or to any person arrested for contempt of Parliament pursuant to a warrant issued under the hand of the Speaker.
(b) any person arrested for contempt of Parliament pursuant to a warrant issued under the hand of the President of the Senate or the Speaker of the House of Representatives; or
(c) any person arrested for contempt of the Legislature of a State pursuant to a warrant issued under the hand of the presiding officer of either House thereof (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House).

Article 6: Slavery and forced labour prohibited

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(1) No person shall be held in slavery.
(2) All forms of forced labour are prohibited, but Parliament may by law provide for compulsory service for national purposes.
(3) Work incidental to the serving of a sentence of imprisonment imposed by a court of law shall not be taken to be forced labour within the meaning of this Article.

Article 7: Protection against retrospective criminal laws and repeated trials

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(1) No person shall be punished for an act or omission which was not punishable by law when it was done or made, and no person shall suffer greater punishment for an offence than was prescribed by law at the time it was committed.
(2) A person who has been acquitted or convicted of an offence shall not be tried again for the same offence except where the conviction or acquittal has been quashed and a retrial ordered by a court superior to that by which he was acquitted or convicted.

Article 8: Equality

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(1) All persons are equal before the law and entitled to the equal protection of the law.
(2) Except as expressly authorized by this Constitution, there shall be no discrimination against citizens on the ground only of religion, race, descent, place of birth or gender in any law or in the appointment to any office or employment under a public authority or in the administration of any law relating to the acquisition, holding or disposition of property or the establishing or carrying on of any trade, business, profession, vocation or employment.
(3) There shall be no discrimination in favour of any person on the ground that he is a citizen of any State or a subject of the Ruler thereof.
(4) No public authority shall discriminate against any person on the ground that he is resident or carrying on business in any part of the Federation outside the jurisdiction of the authority.
(5) This Article does not invalidate or prohibit—
(a) any provision regulating personal law;
(b) any provision or practice restricting office or employment connected with the affairs of any religion, or of an institution managed by a group professing any religion, to persons professing that religion;
(c) (Repealed);
(d) any provision prescribing residence in a State or part of a State as a qualification for election or appointment to any authority having jurisdiction only in that State or part, or for voting in such an election;
(e) any provision of a Constitution of a State, being or corresponding to a provision in force immediately before Merdeka Day;
(f) any provision restricting enlistment in the Malay Regiment to Malays.

Article 9: Prohibition of banishment and freedom of movement

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(1) No citizen shall be banished or excluded from the Federation.
(2) Subject to Clause (3) and to any law relating to the security of the Federation or any part thereof, public order, public health, or the punishment of offenders, every citizen has the right to move freely throughout the Federation and to reside in any part thereof.
(3) Parliament may by law impose restrictions, as between the States of Malaya, the State of Singapore, the Borneo States and the Philippine States, on the rights conferred by Clause (2) in respect of movement and residence.

Article 10: Freedom of speech, assembly and association

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(1) Subject to Clauses (2), (3) and (4)—
(a) every citizen has the right to freedom of speech and expression;
(b) all citizens have the right to assemble peaceably and without arms;
(c) all citizens have the right to form associations.
(2) Parliament may by law impose—
(a) on the rights conferred by paragraph (a) of Clause (1), such restrictions as it deems necessary or expedient in the interest of the security of the Federation or any part thereof, friendly relations with other countries, public order or morality and restrictions designed to protect the privileges of Parliament or of the Legislature of any State or to provide against contempt of court, defamation, or incitement to any offence;
(b) on the right conferred by paragraph (b) of Clause (1), such restrictions as it deems necessary or expedient in the interest of the security of the Federation or any part thereof, or public order;
(c) on the right conferred by paragraph (c) of Clause (1), such restrictions as it deems necessary or expedient in the interest of the security of the Federation or any part thereof, public order or morality.
(3) Restrictions on the right to form associations conferred by paragraph (c) of Clause (1) may also be imposed by any law relating to labour or education.

Article 11: Freedom of religion

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(1) Every person has the right—
(a) to profess and practice his religion and to propagate it;
(b) to renounce religion; and
(c) to profess and to propagate irreligious, agnostic or atheistic views.
(2) No person shall be compelled to pay any tax the proceeds of which are specially allocated in whole or in part for the purposes of a religion other than his own.
(3) Every religious group has the right—
(a) to manage its own religious affairs;
(b) to establish and maintain institutions for religious or charitable purposes; and
(c) to acquire and own property and hold and administer it in accordance with law.
(4) (Repealed).
(5) This Article does not authorize any act contrary to any general law relating to public order, public health or morality.

Article 12: Rights in respect of education

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(1) Without prejudice to the generality of Article 8, there shall be no discrimination against any citizen on the grounds only of religion, race, descent or place of birth—
(a) in the administration of any educational institution maintained by a public authority, and, in particular, the admission of pupils or students or the payment of fees; or
(b) in providing out of the funds of a public authority financial aid for the maintenance or education of pupils or students in any educational institution (whether or not maintained by a public authority and whether within or outside the Federation).
(2) Every religious group has the right to establish and maintain institutions for the education of children in its own religion, and there shall be no discrimination on the ground only of religion in any law relating to such institutions or in the administration of any such law.
(3) No person shall be required to receive instruction in or take part in any ceremony or act of worship of a religion other than his own.
(4) For the purposes of Clause (3) the religion of a person under the age of eighteen years shall be decided by his parent or guardian.

Article 13: Rights to property

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(1) No person shall be deprived of property save in accordance with law.
(2) No law shall provide for the compulsory acquisition or use of property without adequate compensation.
(3) This Article does not invalidate or prohibit any provision for the compulsory acquisition of land

PART III
CITIZENSHIP

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Chapter 1—Acquisition of Citizenship

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Article 14: Citizenship by operation of law

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(1) Subject to the provisions of this Part, the following persons are citizens by operation of law, that is to say:
(a) every person born before Malaysia Day who is a citizen of the Federation by virtue of the provisions contained in Part I of the Second Schedule;
(b) every person born on or after Malaysia Day, and having any of the qualifications specified in Part II of the Second Schedule;
(c) every citizen of Singapore; and
(d) every citizen of the Philippines.
(2) Subject to the provisions of this Part, provision with respect to citizenship of Singapore may be made by the Constitution of that State, and may be amended by laws passed by the Legislature of that State and approved by Act of Parliament.
(3) The provisions of the Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines 1935, as in force immediately before Malaysia Day shall, to the extent specified in the Twelfth Schedule, and the laws made under those provisions, have effect as part of this Constitution for the purposes of citizenship of the Philippines.
(4) Citizenship of Singapore or of the Philippines, as the case may be, shall not be severable from citizenship of the Federation, but a Singapore or Philippines citizen by the loss of either shall lose the other also (subject to the provision made by this Part for the enrolment of a Singapore or Philippines citizen as a citizen who is not so).

Article 15: Citizenship by registration (wives and children of citizens)

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(1) Subject to Article 18, any married woman whose husband is a citizen, but not a Singapore or Philippines citizen, is entitled, upon making application to the Federal Government, to be registered as a citizen if the marriage was subsisting and the husband a citizen at the beginning of October 1962, or if she satisfies the Federal Government—
(a) that she has resided in the Federation outside Singapore and the Philippines throughout the two years preceding the date of the application and intends to do so permanently; and
(b) that she is of good character.
(2) Subject to Article 18, the Federal Government may cause any person under the age of twenty-one years whose parents one at least is (or was at death) a citizen, but not a Singapore or Philippines citizen, to be registered as a citizen upon application made to the Federal Government by his parent or guardian.
(3) Subject to Article 18, a person under the age of twenty-one years who was born before the beginning of October 1962, and whose father is (or was at his death) a citizen, but not a Singapore or Philippines citizen, and was also a citizen at the beginning of that month (if then alive), is entitled upon application made to the Federal Government by his parent or guardian, to be registered as a citizen if the Federal Government is satisfied that he is ordinarily resident in the Federation outside Singapore and the Philippines and is of good character.
(4) For the purposes of Clause (1) residence before Malaysia Day in the territories comprised in the Borneo States shall be treated as residence in the Federation.
(5) The reference in Clause (1) to a married woman is a reference to a woman whose marriage has been registered in accordance with any written law in force in the Federation, including any such law in force before Merdeka Day, or with any written law in force before Malaysia Day in the territories comprised in the Borneo States, Singapore or the Philippines:
Provided that this Clause shall not apply where the woman applies to be registered as a citizen before the beginning of September 1965, or such later date as may be fixed by order of the President, and is at the date of the application ordinarily resident in the Borneo States, Singapore or the Philippines.
(6) In Clause (1) the words “outside Singapore and the Philippines” shall not have effect in the case of a woman whose husband is a citizen by naturalization under Clause (2) of Article 19.

Article 15A: Special power to register children

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Subject to Article 18, the Federal Government may, in such special circumstances as it thinks fit, cause any person under the age of twenty-one years to be registered as a citizen.

Article 16: Citizenship by registration (persons born in the Federation before Merdeka Day)

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Subject to Article 18, any person of or over the age of eighteen years who was born in the Federation before Merdeka Day is entitled, upon making application to the Federal Government, to be registered as a citizen if he satisfies the Federal Government—
(a) that he has resided in the Federation outside Singapore and the Philippines during the seven years immediately preceding the date of the application, for periods amounting in the aggregate to not less than five years;
(b) that he intends to do so permanently;
(c) that he is of good character; and
(d) that he has an elementary knowledge of the Malay language.

Article 16A: Citizenship by registration (persons resident in Borneo States on Malaysia Day)

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Subject to Article 18, any person of or over the age of eighteen years who is on Malaysia Day ordinarily resident in a Borneo State is entitled, upon making application to the Federal Government before September 1971, to be registered as a citizen if he satisfies the Federal Government—
(a) that he has resided before Malaysia Day in the territories comprised in those States and after Malaysia Day in the Federation for periods which amount in the aggregate to not less than seven years in the ten years immediately preceding the date of the application, and which include the twelve months immediately preceding that date;
(b) that he intends to reside permanently in the Federation;
(c) that he is of good character; and
(d) except where the application is made before September 1965, and the applicant has attained the age of forty-five years at the date of the application, that he has a sufficient knowledge of the English language or the Malay language or, in the case of an applicant ordinarily resident in Sarawak, the English language, the Malay language or any native language in current use in Sarawak.

Article 17: (Citizenship by registration (persons resident in the Federation on Merdeka Day)—Repealed)

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(Repealed).

Article 18: General provisions as to registration

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(1) No person of or over the age of eighteen years shall be registered as a citizen under this Constitution or the Constitution of the State of Singapore until he has taken the oath set out in the First Schedule.
(2) Except with the approval of the Federal Government, no person who has renounced or has been deprived of citizenship under this Constitution or the Constitution of the State of Singapore or who has renounced or has been deprived of federal citizenship or citizenship of the Federation before Merdeka Day under the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948 shall be registered as a citizen under this Constitution.
(3) A person registered as a citizen under this Constitution or the Constitution of the State of Singapore shall be a citizen by registration from the day on which he is so registered.
(4) (Repealed).

Article 19: Citizenship by naturalization

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(1) Subject to Clause (9), the Federal Government may, upon application made by any person of or over the age of twenty-one years who is not a citizen, grant a certificate of naturalization to that person if satisfied—
(a) that—
(i) he is resided in the Federation outside Singapore and the Philippines for the required periods and intends, if the certificate is granted, to do so permanently;
(ii) he has resided in Singapore for the required periods and intends, if the certificate is granted, to do so permanently; or
(iii) he has resided in the Philippines for the required periods and intends, if the certificate is granted, to do so permanently; or
(b) that he is of good character; and
(c) that he has an adequate knowledge of the Malay language.
(2) Subject to Clause (9), the Federal Government may, in such special circumstances as it thinks fit, upon application made by any person of or over the age of twenty-one years who is not a citizen, grant a certificate of naturalization to that person if satisfied—
(a) that he has resided in the Federation for the required periods and intends, if the certificate is granted, to do so permanently;
(b) that he is of good character; and
(c) that he has an adequate knowledge of the English language, the Filipino language, the Spanish language, the Malay language, the Mandarin language or the Tamil language.
(3) The periods of residence in the Federation or the relevant part of it which are required for the grant of a certificate of naturalization are periods which amount in the aggregate to not less than ten years in the twelve years immediately preceding the date of the application for the certificate, and which include the twelve months immediately preceding that date.
(4) For the purposes of Clauses (1) and (2) residence before Malaysia Day in the territories comprised in the Borneo States shall be treated as residence in the Federation outside Singapore and the Philippines; and for the purposes of Clause (2) residence before Malaysia Day in Singapore or in the Philippines shall be treated as residence in the Federation.
(5) A person to whom a certificate of naturalization is granted shall be a citizen by naturalization from the date on which the certificate is granted.
(6) A person to whom a certificate of naturalization is granted—
(a) shall be a Singapore citizen if, but only if, the certificate is granted by virtue of paragraph (a)(ii) of Clause (1); and
(b) shall be a Philippines citizen if, but only if, the certificate is granted by virtue of paragraph (a)(iii) of Clause (1).
(7) A certificate of naturalization as a Singapore citizen shall not be granted without the concurrence of the Government of Singapore.
(8) A certificate of naturalization as a Philippines citizen shall not be granted without the concurrence of the Conference of Rulers and Governors.
(9) Any application for naturalization as a citizen of Singapore or of the Republic of the Philippines which has been made but not disposed of before Malaysia Day shall as from that day be treated as if it had been an application duly made for naturalization under this Article, and as if anything done in connection therewith before that day under or for the purposes of the law of Singapore or of the Republic of the Philippines had been duly done under or for the purposes of this Article.
(10) No certificate of naturalization shall be granted to any person until he has taken the oath set out in the First Schedule.

Article 19A: Transfer of citizenship to or from Singapore

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(1) The Federal Government may, upon application made by any Singapore citizen of or over the age of twenty-one years—
(a) enrol him as a citizen who is not a Singapore or Philippines citizen, if the Federal Government is satisfied that, had his application been for the grant under Article 19 of a certificate of naturalization as a citizen who is not a Singapore or Philippines citizen, the conditions of paragraphs (a)(i), (b) and (c) of Clause (1) of that Article for the grant of the certificate would be fulfilled; or
(b) enrol him as a Philippines citizen, if the Federal Government is satisfied that, had his application been for the grant under Article 19 of a certificate of naturalization as a Philippines citizen, the conditions of paragraphs (a)(iii), (b) and (c) of Clause (1) of that Article for the grant of the certificate would be fulfilled.
(2) In relation to Singapore citizens Articles 15 and 15A shall apply to entitle or allow them to be enrolled as citizens who are not Singapore or Philippines citizens, in the same way as those Articles apply, in relation to persons who are not citizens, to entitle or allow them to be registered as citizens, except that references to Article 18 shall not apply, nor shall Clause (6) of Article 15.
(3) A citizen enrolled as being or not being a Singapore citizen by virtue of this Article or by virtue of any corresponding provision in the Constitution of the State of Singapore shall be or not be a Singapore citizen accordingly from the day on which he is so enrolled.
(4) Where a person has been enrolled under this Article as a citizen who is not a Singapore citizen, and the Federal Government is satisfied that the enrolment—
(a) was obtained by means of fraud, false representation or the concealment of any material fact; or
(b) was effected by mistake;
the Federal Government may cancel the enrolment:
Provided that Article 27 shall apply in relation to the cancellation as it applies in relation to an order under Article 24, 25 or 26 depriving a person of citizenship.
(5) Where a person’s enrolment as a citizen who is not a Singapore citizen is cancelled under paragraph (a) of Clause (4), and in consequence of that enrolment a child of that person had also been enrolled as such a citizen pursuant to Clause (2) of Article 15 as applied by this Article, the Federal Government may also cancel the child’s enrolment unless the child has attained the age of twenty-one.

Article 19B: Transfer of citizenship to or from Philippines

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(1) The Federal Government may, upon application made by any Philippines citizen of or over the age of twenty-one years, enrol him as a citizen who is not a Singapore or Philippines citizen, if the Federal Government is satisfied that, had his application been for the grant under Article 19 of a certificate of naturalization as a citizen who is not a Singapore or Philippines citizen, the conditions of paragraphs (a)(i), (b) and (c) of Clause (1) of that Article for the grant of the certificate would be fulfilled.
(2) The Federal Government may, upon application made by any citizen who is not a Philippines citizen of or over the age of twenty-one years, enrol him as a Philippines citizen, if the Federal Government is satisfied that, had his application been for the grant under Article 19 of a certificate of naturalization as a citizen who is not a Singapore or Philippines citizen, the conditions of paragraphs (a)(iii), (b) and (c) of Clause (1) of that Article for the grant of the certificate would be fulfilled.
(3) In relation to Philippines citizens Articles 15 and 15A shall apply to entitle or allow them to be enrolled as citizens who are not Singapore or Philippines citizens, in the same way as those Articles apply, in relation to persons who are not citizens, to entitle or allow them to be registered as citizens, except that references to Article 18 shall not apply, nor shall Clause (6) of Article 15.
(4) In relation to citizens who are not Philippines citizens the Twelfth Schedule and laws made thereunder shall apply to entitle or allow them to be enrolled as Philippines citizens, in the same way as that Schedule ands those laws apply, in relation to persons who are not citizens, to entitle or allow them to be registered as Philippines citizens.
(5) A citizen enrolled as being or not being a Philippines citizen by virtue of this Article or by virtue of any corresponding provision in the Constitution of the State of Singapore shall be or not be a Philippines citizen accordingly from the day on which he is so enrolled.
(6) Where a person has been enrolled under this Article as a citizen who is not a Philippines citizen, and the Federal Government is satisfied that the enrolment—
(a) was obtained by means of fraud, false representation or the concealment of any material fact; or
(b) was effected by mistake;
the Federal Government may cancel the enrolment:
Provided that Article 27 shall apply in relation to the cancellation as it applies in relation to an order under Article 24, 25 or 26 depriving a person of citizenship.
(7) Where a person’s enrolment as a citizen who is not a Philippines citizen is cancelled under paragraph (a) of Clause (4), and in consequence of that enrolment a child of that person had also been enrolled as such a citizen pursuant to Clause (2) of Article 15 as applied by this Article, the Federal Government may also cancel the child’s enrolment unless the child has attained the age of twenty-one.

Article 19C: General provisions as to enrolment as Singapore or Philippines citizens

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(1) No person shall be enroled as a Singapore citizen and as a Philippines citizen simultaneously.
(2) Where under Articles 19A or 19B, under this Article or under any provision of the Constitution of the State of Singapore a person’s enrolment as a citizen of any Description is cancelled, that shall not discharge him from liability in respect of anything done or omitted before the cancellation, but except as regards anything so done or omitted he shall revert to his former status as a citizen.

Article 20: (Naturalization of members of Federation forces—Repealed)

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20. (Repealed).

Article 21: (General provisions as to naturalization—Repealed)

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21. (Repealed).

Article 22: Citizenship by incorporation of territory

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22. If any new territory is admitted to the Federation after Malaysia Day in pursuance of Article 2, Parliament may by law determine what persons are to be citizens by reason of their connection with that territory and the date or dates from which such persons are to be citizens.

Chapter 2—Termination of Citizenship

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Article 23: Renunciation of citizenship

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23. (1) Any citizen of or over the age of twenty-one years and of sound mind who is also or is about to become a citizen of another country may renounce his citizenship of the Federation by declaration registered by the Federal Government, and shall thereupon cease to be a citizen.

(2) A declaration made under this Article during any war in which the Federation is engaged shall not be registered except with the approval of the Federal Government.
(3) This Article applies to a woman under the age of twenty-one years who has been married as it applies to a person of or over that age.

Article 24: Deprivation of citizenship on acquisition or exercise of foreign citizenship, etc.

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24. (1) If the Federal Government is satisfied that any citizen has acquired by registration, naturalization or other voluntary and formal act (other than marriage) the citizenship of any country outside the Federation, the Federal Government may by order deprive that person of his citizenship.

(2) If the Federal Government is satisfied that any citizen has voluntarily claimed and exercised in any country, being rights accorded exclusively to its citizens, the Federal Government may by order deprive that person of his citizenship.
(3) Where provision is in force under the law of any Commonwealth country for conferring on citizens of that country rights not available to other Commonwealth citizens, Clause (2) shall apply, in relation to those rights, as if that Commonwealth country were a foreign country.
(3A) Without prejudice to the generality of Clause (2) and that Clause as applied by Clause (3), the exercise of a vote in any political election in a place outside the Federation shall be deemed to be the voluntary claim and exercise of a right available under the law of that place; and for the purposes of Clause (2) and that Clause as applied as aforesaid, a person who, after such date as the President may by order appoint for the purposes of this Clause—
(a) applies to the authorities of a place outside the Federation for the issue or renewal of a passport; or
(b) uses a passport issued by such authorities as a travel document, shall be deemed voluntarily to claim and exercise a right available under the law of that place, being a right accorded exclusively to the citizens of that place.
(4) If the Federal Government is satisfied that any woman who is a citizen by registration under Clause (1) of Article 15 has acquired the citizenship of any country outside the Federation by virtue of her marriage to a person who is not a citizen, the Federal Government may by order deprive her of her citizenship.

Article 25: Deprivation of citizenship by registration under Article 16A or 17 or by naturalization

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(1) The Federal Government may by order deprive of his citizenship any person who is a citizen by registration under Article 16A or 17 or a citizen by naturalization if satisfied—
(a) that he has shown himself by act or speech to be disloyal or disaffected towards the Federation;
(b) that he has, during any war in which the Federation is or was engaged, unlawfully traded or communicated with an enemy or been engaged in or associated with any business which to his knowledge was carried on in such manner as to assist an enemy in that war; or
(c) that he has, within the period of five years beginning with the date of the registration or the grant of the certificate, been sentenced in any country to imprisonment for a term of not less than twelve months or to a fine of not less than five thousand pesos or the equivalent in the currency of that country, and has not received a free pardon in respect of the offence for which he was so sentenced.
(1A) The Federal Government may by order deprive of his citizenship any person who is a citizen by registration under Article 16A or 17 or a citizen by naturalization if satisfied that without the Federal Government’s approval, he has accepted, served in, or performed the duties of any office, post or employment under the Government of any foreign country or any political subdivision thereof, or under any agency of such a Government, in any case where an oath, affirmation or declaration of allegiance is required in respect of the office, post or employment:
Provided that a person shall not be deprived of citizenship under this Clause by reason of anything done before the beginning of October 1962, notwithstanding that he was at the time a citizen.
(2) The Federal Government may by order deprive of his citizenship any person who is a citizen by registration under Article 16A or 17 or a citizen by naturalization if satisfied that he has been ordinarily resident in foreign countries for a continuous period of five years and during that period has neither—
(a) been at any time in the service of the Federation or of an international organization of which the Federal Government was a member; nor
(b) registered annually at a consulate of the Federation his intention to retain his citizenship.
(3) (Repealed).

Article 26: Other provisions for deprivation of citizenship by registration or naturalization

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(1) The Federal Government may by order deprive of his citizenship any citizen by registration or by naturalization if satisfied that the registration or certificate of naturalization—
(a) was obtained by means of fraud, false representation or the concealment of any material fact; or
(b) was effected or granted by mistake.
(2) The Federal Government may by order deprive of her citizenship any woman who is a citizen by registration under Clause (1) of Article 15 if satisfied that the marriage by virtue of which she was registered has been dissolved, otherwise than by death, within the period of two years beginning with the date of the marriage.
(3) (Repealed).
(4) (Repealed).

Article 26A: Deprivation of citizenship of child of person losing citizenship

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26A. Where a person has renounced his citizenship or been deprived thereof under Clause (1) of Article 24 or paragraph (a) of Clause (1) of Article 26, the Federal Government may by order deprive of his citizenship any child of that person under the age of twenty-one who has been registered as a citizen pursuant to this Constitution or the Constitution of the State of Singapore, and was so registered as being the child of that person or of that person’s wife or husband.

Article 26B: General provisions as to loss of citizenship

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26B. (1) Renunciation or deprivation of citizenship shall not discharge a person from liability in respect of anything done or omitted before he ceased to be a citizen.

(2) No person shall be deprived of citizenship under Article 25, 26 or 26A unless the Federal Government is satisfied that it is not conducive to the public good that he should continue to be a citizen; and no person shall be deprived of citizenship under Article 25, paragraph (b) of Clause (1) of Article 26, or Article 26A if the Federal Government is satisfied that as a result of the deprivation he would not be a citizen of any country.

Article 27: Procedure for deprivation

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27. (1) Before making an order under Article 24, 25 or 26, the Federal Government shall give to the person against whom the order is proposed to be made notice in writing informing him of the ground on which the order is proposed to be made and of his right to have the case referred to a committee of inquiry under this Article.

(2) If any person to whom such notice is given applies to have the case referred as aforesaid the Federal Government shall, and in any other case the Federal Government may, refer the case to a committee of inquiry consisting of a chairman (being a person possessing judicial experience) and two other members appointed by that Government for the purpose.
(3) In the case of any such reference, the committee shall hold an inquiry in such manner as the Federal Government may direct, and submit its report to that Government; and the Federal Government shall have regard to the report in determining whether to make the order.

Article 28: Application of Chapter 2 to certain citizens by operation of law

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28. (1) For the purposes of the foregoing provisions of this Chapter—

(a) any person who before Merdeka Day became a federal citizen or a citizen of the Federation by registration as a citizen or in consequence of his registration as the subject of a Ruler, or by the grant of a certificate of citizenship, under any provision of the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948, or of any State law shall be treated as a citizen by registration and, if he was not born within the Federation, as a citizen by registration under Article 17;
(b) a woman who before that day became a federal citizen or a citizen of the Federation by registration as a citizen, or in consequence of her registration as the subject of a Ruler, under any provision of the said Agreement or of any State law authorizing the registration of women married to citizens of the Federation or to subjects of the Ruler shall be treated as a citizen by registration under Clause (1) of Article 15;
(c) any person who before that day was naturalized as a federal citizen or a citizen of the Federation under the said Agreement or became a federal citizen or a citizen of the Federation in consequence of his naturalization as the subject of a Ruler under any State law shall (subject to Clause (2)) be treated as a citizen by naturalization, and references in those provisions to the registration or naturalization of a citizen shall be construed accordingly.
(2) No person born within the Federation shall be liable by virtue of this Article to be deprived of citizenship under Article 25.
(3) A person who on Merdeka Day became a citizen by operation of law as having been a citizen of the Federation immediately before that day shall not be deprived of citizenship under Clause (1) or (2) of Article 24 by reason of anything done on or before that day; but in the case of any such person Clause (2) of Article 25 shall apply equally in relation to a period of residence in foreign countries beginning before Merdeka Day and in relation to such a period beginning on or after that day.

Article 28A: Deprivation of citizenship of persons becoming citizens on Malaysia Day

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(1) For the purposes of Articles 24, 25, 26 and 26A a person who is a citizen by operation of law as having the status of a Singapore citizen shall be treated—
(a) as a citizen by registration, if he acquired that status by registration, or if he acquired it by enrolment when he was (or for those purposes was to be treated as being) a citizen of the Federation by registration; and
(b) as a citizen by naturalization, if he acquired that status by naturalization, or if he acquired it by enrolment when he was (or for those purposes was to be treated as being) a citizen of the Federation by naturalization;
and references in those Articles to the registration or naturalization of a citizen shall be construed accordingly.
(2) For the purposes of Articles 24, 25, 26 and 26A a person who is a citizen by operation of law as having the status of a Philippines citizen shall be treated—
(a) as a citizen by registration, if he acquired that status by registration, or if he acquired it by enrolment when he was (or for those purposes was to be treated as being) a citizen of the Federation by registration; and
(b) as a citizen by naturalization, if he acquired that status by naturalization, or if he acquired it by enrolment when he was (or for those purposes was to be treated as being) a citizen of the Federation by naturalization;
and references in those Articles to the registration or naturalization of a citizen shall be construed accordingly.
(3) For the purposes of Articles 24, 25, 26 and 26A a person who on Malaysia Day becomes a citizen by operation of law because immediately before that day he has the status of a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies shall be treated—
(a) as a citizen by registration if he acquired that status by registration; and
(b) as a citizen by naturalization if he acquired that status by or in consequence of naturalization;
and references in those Articles to the registration or naturalization of a citizen shall be construed accordingly.
(4) Where a woman is under this Article to be treated as a citizen by registration, and the status in consequence of which she is to be so treated was acquired by her by virtue of marriage, then for purposes of Clause (4) of Article 24 and Clause (2) of Article 26 she shall be treated as a citizen by registration under Clause (1) of Article 15.
(5) Where a person born before Malaysia Day is under this Article to be treated as a citizen by registration by virtue of a connection with a Borneo State, with Singapore or with a Philippine State, and he was not born in the territories comprised in the Borneo States, in the State of Singapore or in the Philippine States, as the case may be, Article 25 shall apply to him as if he were a citizen by registration under Article 16A or 17.
(6) Notwithstanding that a person is under this Article to be treated as a citizen by naturalization, he shall not be deprived of his citizenship under Article 25 if he was born before Malaysia Day in the territories comprised in the Borneo States and is to be so treated by virtue of a status acquired by or in consequence of naturalization in those territories.
(7) Without prejudice to the foregoing Clauses, where on Malaysia Day a person becomes a citizen by operation of law in virtue of any status possessed by him immediately before that day, but he was liable in respect of things done before that day to be deprived of that status under the law relating thereto, then the Federal Government may by order deprive him of his citizenship, if proceedings for that purpose are begun before September 1965; but Clause (2) of Article 26B and, subject to Clause (8), Article 27 shall apply to an order under this Clause as they apply to an order under Article 25.
(8) Where a person is liable to be deprived of citizenship under Clause (7) and proceedings had before Malaysia Day been begun to deprive him of the status in virtue of which he acquired his citizenship, those proceedings shall be treated as proceedings to deprive him of citizenship under that Clause, and shall be continued as such; but they shall be continued in accordance with the law relating to that status immediately before Malaysia Day, and the functions of the Federal Government in relation thereto shall be delegated to such authority of the State in question as the Federal Government may determine.

Chapter 3—Supplemental

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Article 29: Commonwealth citizenship

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(1) In accordance with the position of the Federation within the Commonwealth, every person who is a citizen of the Federation enjoys by virtue of that citizenship the status of a Commonwealth citizen in common with the citizens of other Commonwealth countries.
(2) Any existing law shall, except so far as Parliament otherwise provides, apply in relation to a citizen of the Republic of Ireland or of the United States of America who is not also a Commonwealth citizen as it applies in relation to a Commonwealth citizen.

Article 30: Certificates of citizenship

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(1) The Federal Government may, on the application of any person with respect to whose citizenship a doubt exists, whether of fact or of law, certify that that person is a citizen.
(2) A certificate issued under Clause (1) shall, unless it is proved that it was obtained by means of fraud, false representation or concealment of any material fact, be conclusive evidence that the person to whom it relates was a citizen on the date of the certificate, but without prejudice to any evidence that he was a citizen at an earlier date.
(3) For the purpose of determining whether a person was born a citizen of the Federation, any question whether he was born a citizen of another country shall be decided by the Federal Government, whose certificate thereon (unless proved to have been obtained by means of fraud, false representation or concealment of a material fact) shall be conclusive.
(4) (Repealed).

Article 30A: Franchise, etc., of Singapore citizens, Philippines citizens and other citizens

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(1) Notwithstanding anything in Article 47—
(a) a Singapore citizen is not qualified to be an elected member of either House of Parliament except as a member for or from Singapore; and a citizen who is not a Singapore citizen is not qualified to be a member of either House for or from Singapore; and
(b) a Philippines citizen is not qualified to be an elected member of either House of Parliament except as a member for or from a Philippine State; and a citizen who is not a Philippines citizen is not qualified to be a member of either House for or from a Philippine State.
(2) A Singapore citizen shall not be qualified to be an elected member of either House of the Legislature of any State other than Singapore, and a citizen who is not a Singapore citizen shall not be qualified to be a member of either House of the Legislature of Singapore.
(3) A Philippines citizen shall not be qualified to be an elected member of either House of the Legislature of any State other than a Philippine State, and a citizen who is not a Philippines citizen shall not be qualified to be a member of either House of the Legislature of any Philippine State.
(4) Any election of a person to either House of Parliament or to the Legislature of a State contrary to Clause (1), (2) or (3) shall be void; and if a member of either House of Parliament, or either House of the Legislature of any State (not being an appointed member), changes his status as being or not being a Singapore citizen or a Philippines citizen, his seat shall become vacant.
(5) Where in any State the Legislature consists of one House only, references in this Article to either House of the Legislature of any State shall be deemed to include that House.

Article 30B: Liaison as to citizenship between governments of Federation and of Singapore

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(1) Where under this Constitution a person becomes a Singapore citizen by naturalization, or is enrolled as a citizen who is not a Singapore citizen, or being a Singapore citizen renounces or is deprived of his citizenship, or where a certificate of citizenship or other certificate is issued under Article 30 in relation to citizenship of Singapore, the Federal Government shall notify the Government of Singapore of that fact.
(2) Where under the Constitution of the State of Singapore a person becomes a Singapore citizen by registration, or is enrolled as a Singapore citizen, or is deprived of his citizenship, or where a certificate of citizenship is issued under that Constitution, the Government of Singapore shall notify the Federal Government of that fact.

Article 30C: Proceedings relating to Philippine Nationality Law

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Members of either House of Parliament for or from any State other than a Philippine State (with the exception of the presiding officer of that House) shall not be members of that House for the purposes of any proceedings relating to the Twelfth Schedule and the laws made thereunder.

Article 31: Application of Second Schedule

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Until Parliament otherwise provides, the supplementary provisions contained in Part III of the Second Schedule shall have effect for the purposes of this Part.

PART IV
THE FEDERATION

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Chapter 1—The Supreme Head

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Article 32: Supreme Head of the Federation

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(1) There shall be a Supreme Head of the Federation, who shall be known as the President, and shall take precedence over all persons in the Federation.
(2) An election of the President shall be held on the second Tuesday of November, in 1965 and every fourth year thereafter.
(3) The President shall be elected by the direct vote of the electors of the Federation for a term of four years, but may at any time resign his office by writing under his hand addressed to the Vice-President or be removed from office in accordance with Article [...].
(4) If during the term for which the President was elected a vacancy occurs in the office of the President, and such office is not assumed by the Vice-President under Clause (1) of Article 15, an election for the office of the President shall be held within sixty days from the date of the vacancy, and the President so elected shall hold office for the remainder of his Predecessor's term.

Article 32A: Qualifications of President and Vice-President

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(1) Subject to clause (2), every citizen resident in the Federation is qualified to be President or to be Vice-President if he is not less than forty years old, unless he is disqualified for being a member of Parliament by this Constitution or by any law made in pursuance of Article 48.
(2) A person who has served as President for two consecutive terms, for a period of four years beginning with the date on which such second consecutive term expires, not be qualified to be President or to be Vice-President for the term next following.
(3) For the purposes of clause (2), a person shall be deemed to have served as President for a given term if he has held the office of President for not less than two years during the continuance of that term, but not otherwise.

Article 33: Deputy Supreme Head of the Federation

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(1) There shall be a Deputy Supreme Head of the Federation (to be known as the Vice-President) who shall exercise the functions and have the privileges of the President during any vacancy in the office of the President and during any period during which the President is unable to exercise the functions of his office owing to illness, absence from the Federation or for any other cause.
(1A) The Vice-President shall take precedence over all persons in the Federation next after the President.
(2) The Vice-President shall be elected by the direct vote of the electors of the Federation alongside the President and for the same term as him, but may at any time resign his office by writing under his hand addressed to the President or be removed from office in accordance with Article [...].
(3) If during the term for which the Vice-President was elected a vacancy occurs in the office of the President, the person holding the office of Vice-President shall then assume the office of President and the office of the Vice-President shall become vacant on such assumption.
(4) If a vacancy occurs in the office of the Vice-President, the President shall appoint, with the consent of both Houses of Parliament, a person to fill the vacancy for the remainder of the term.
(5) In cases where the functions of the Vice-President under clause (1) fall to be exercised by him but cannot be so exercised owing to a vacancy in the office of the Vice-President or to his illness, absence from the Federation or to any other cause, those functions shall be exercised by the President of the Senate (or, during any vacancy in the office of the President of the Senate and during any period during which the President of the Senate is unable to exercise the functions of his office owing to illness, absence from the Federation or for any other cause, by the Speaker of the House of Representatives).
(6) Parliament may by law provide for the exercise of the functions of the President in cases where those functions cannot be exercised under clause (5).
(7) Clauses (3) and (4) shall not apply during any period where the functions of the President are exercised under clause (5) or (6).

Article 34: Disabilities of President, etc.

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(1) The President shall—
(a) if he is a member of the administration or the Governor of any State not having a Ruler, vacate his office as such;
(b) if he is a Member of either House of Parliament, vacate his seat in that House;
(c) if he is a Member of either House of the Legislature of any State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House), vacate his seat in that House.
(2) The President shall not hold any appointment carrying any remuneration.
(3) The President shall not actively engage in any commercial enterprise.
(4) The President shall not receive any emoluments of any kind whatever payable or accruing to him as the Ruler of his State under the provisions of the Constitution of that State or of any State law.
(5) The President shall not, without the consent of the Cabinet, be absent from the Federation for more than fifteen days, except on a State visit to another country.
(6) Clauses (1) to (5) shall also apply to the Vice-President:
Provided that the Vice-President may be appointed as a member of the Cabinet.
(7) Where the Vice-President or any other person authorized by law exercises the functions of the President for a period exceeding fifteen days Clauses (2) to (5) shall apply to him during that period as they apply to the President.
(8) (Repealed).

Article 35: Civil List of the President and the Vice-President

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(1) Parliament shall by law provide a Civil List of the President and the Vice-President which shall include provision for an annuity to be paid to their respective spouses, and shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund and shall not be diminished during their respective continuances in office.
(2) Parliament shall by law make provision for the remuneration of any person (other than the Vice-President) authorized by law to exercise the functions of the President during any period during which he exercises those functions and the remuneration for which provision is made in pursuance of this Clause shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.

Article 36: Public Seal

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The President shall keep and use the Public Seal of the Federation.

Article 37: Oath of office of President

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(1) The President shall before exercising his functions take and subscribe before the Houses of Parliament jointly and in the presence of the Cabinet, the Conference of Rulers and Governors and the Supreme Court the oath of office set out in the Fourth Schedule; and the oath shall be administered by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (or in his absence the next senior judge of the Supreme Court available) and attested by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(2) The Vice-President shall before exercising his functions take and subscribe before the Houses of Parliament jointly and in the presence of the Cabinet, the Conference of Rulers and Governors and the Supreme Court the oath of office set out in the Fourth Schedule; and the oath shall be administered by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (or in his absence the next senior judge of the Supreme Court available) and attested by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(3) Any person (other than the Vice-President) authorized by law to exercise the functions of the President shall before exercising his functions take and subscribe before the Houses of Parliament jointly and in the presence of the Cabinet, the Conference of Rulers and Governors and the Supreme Court the oath of office set out in the Fourth Schedule; and the oath shall be administered by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court (or in his absence the next senior judge of the Supreme Court available) and attested by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(4) (Repealed).

Chapter 2—The Conference of Rulers

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Article 38: Conference of Rulers and Governors

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(1) There shall be a Conference of Rulers and Governors, which shall be constituted in accordance with the Fifth Schedule.
(2) The Conference of Rulers shall exercise its functions of—
(a) (Repealed);
(b) granting or withholding concurrence to any certificate of naturalization as a Philippines citizen;
(c) consenting or withholding consent to any law or and making or giving advice on any appointment which under this Constitution requires the consent of the Conference or is to be made by or after consultation with the Conference,
and may deliberate on questions of national policy (for example changes in immigration policy) and any other matter that it thinks fit.
(3) When the Conference deliberates on matters of national policy the President shall be accompanied by the Prime Minister, and the Rulers and Governors by their Chief Ministers.
(4) (Repealed).
(5) (Repealed).
(6) The members of the Conference of Rulers may act in their discretion in any proceedings relating to the following functions, that is to say:
(a) the giving or withholding of consent to any law altering the boundaries of a State;
(b) the advising on any appointment; or
(c) the granting or withholding of concurrence to any certificate of naturalization as a Philippines citizen.
(d) (Repealed).

Chapter 3–The Executive

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Article 39: Executive authority of Federation

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The executive authority of the Federation shall be vested in the President and exercisable, subject to the provisions of any federal law and of the Second Schedule, by him or by the Cabinet or any Minister authorized by the Cabinet, but Parliament may by law confer executive functions on other persons.

Article 40: President to act on advice

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(1) In the exercise of his functions under this Constitution or federal law the President shall act in accordance with the advice of the Cabinet or of a Minister acting under the general authority of the Cabinet, except as otherwise provided by this Constitution; but shall be entitled, at his request, to any information concerning the government of the Federation which is available to the Cabinet.
(2) The President may act in his discretion in the performance of the following functions, that is to say:
(a) the appointment of a Prime Minister or the making of any appointment which under this Constitution requires the consent of the Parliament or of the Commission on Appointments or of the Conference of Rulers and Governors;
(b) functions exercisable under Articles 41, 41A, 42, 55, 60, 62B, 66, 150 and 150A;
(c) the convening of a meeting of the Cabinet under his chairmanship, and any action at such a meeting,
and in any other case mentioned in this Constitution.
(3) Federal law may make provision for requiring the President to act after consultation with or on the recommendation of any person or body of persons in the exercise of any of his functions other than—
(a) functions exercisable in his discretion;
(b) functions with respect to the exercise of which provision is made in any other Article.

Article 41: Supreme command of armed forces

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The President shall be the Supreme Commander of the armed forces of the Federation.

Article 41A: General direction and control of Ministries, etc.

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(1) The President shall have general direction and control of all Ministries and Departments of the Federal Government.
(2) The President shall have general supervision over local government in the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Metropolitan Manila and Labuan.

Article 42: Power of pardon, etc

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(1) The President has power to grant pardons, reprieves and respites in respect of all offences which have been tried by court-martial and all offences committed in the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Metropolitan Manila and Labuan; and the Ruler or Governor of a State has power to grant pardons, reprieves and respites in respect of all other offences committed in his State.
(2) Subject to Clause (10), any power conferred by federal or State law to remit, suspend or commute sentences for any offence shall be exercisable by the President if the sentence was passed by a court-martial or by a civil court exercising jurisdiction in the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Metropolitan Manila and Labuan and, in any other case, shall be exercisable by the Ruler or Governor of the State in which the offence was committed.
(3) Where an offence was committed wholly or partly outside the Federation or in more than one State or in circumstances which make it doubtful where it was committed, it shall be treated for the purposes of this Article as having been committed in the State in which it was tried. For the purpose of this Clause the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur, the Federal Territory of Metropolitan Manila and the Federal Territory of Labuan, shall each be regarded as a State.
(4) The powers mentioned in this Article—
(a) (repealed);
(b) shall, so far as they are exercisable by the Ruler or Governor of a State, be exercised on the advice of a Pardons Board constituted for that State in accordance with Clause (5).
(5) The Pardons Board constituted for each State shall consist of the Attorney General of the Federation, the Chief Minister of the State and not more than three other members, who shall be appointed by the Ruler or Governor; but the Attorney General may from time to time by instrument in writing delegate his functions as a member of the Board to any other person, and the Ruler or Governor may appoint any person to exercise temporarily the functions of any member of the Board appointed by him who is absent or unable to act.
(6) The members of a Pardons Board appointed by the Ruler or Governor shall be appointed for a term of three years and shall be eligible for reappointment, but may at any time resign from the Board.
(7) A member of either House of the Legislature of any State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House) or of either House of Parliament shall not be appointed by the Ruler or Governor to be a member of a Pardons Board or to exercise temporarily the functions of such a member.
(8) The Pardons Board shall meet in the presence of the Ruler or Governor and he shall preside over it.
(9) Before tendering their advice on any matter a Pardons Board shall consider any written opinion which the Attorney General may have delivered thereon.
(10) (Repealed).

Article 43: Cabinet

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(1) The President shall appoint a Cabinet of Ministers to advise him in the exercise of his functions.
(1A) The President may at any time summon the Cabinet to meet under his chairmanship, and when so meeting the Cabinet may deliberate on questions of national policy and any other matter that it thinks fit.
(2) The Cabinet shall be appointed as follows, that is to say:
(a) the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall first appoint as Prime Minister to preside over the Cabinet person who is qualified to be elected a member of either House of Parliament and who in his judgment is likely to command the confidence of the majority of the members of the House of Representatives; and
(b) he shall after consultation with the Prime Minister appoint other Ministers from among persons who are qualified to be elected members of either House of Parliament.
(3) The Cabinet shall be collectively responsible to Parliament.
(4) If the Prime Minister ceases to command the confidence of the majority of the members of the House of Representatives, then, unless the President dissolves that House within seven days, the Prime Minister shall tender the resignation of the Cabinet.
(5) Subject to Clause (4), Ministers other than the Prime Minister shall hold office during the pleasure of the President, unless the appointment of any Minister shall have been revoked by the President after consultation with the Prime Minister but any Minister may resign his office.
(5A) If a Minister other than the Prime Minister ceases to command the confidence of the majority of the members of the House of Representatives, then, unless within seven days the President dissolves that House or that Minister's appointment is revoked, the Prime Minister shall tender his resignation.
(6) Before a Minister exercises the functions of his office he shall take and subscribe in the presence of the President the oath of office and allegiance and the oath of secrecy set out in the Sixth Schedule.
(7) Notwithstanding anything in this Article, a person who is a citizen by naturalization or by registration under Article 17 shall not be appointed Prime Minister.
(8) (Repealed).
(9) Parliament shall by law make provision for the remuneration of members of the Cabinet.

Article 43A: Assistant Ministers

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(1) The President may after consultation with the Prime Minister appoint Assistant Ministers from among persons who are qualified to be elected members of either House of Parliament.
(2) Assistant Ministers shall assist Ministers in the discharge of their duties and functions.
(3) The provisions of Clauses (5) and (6) of Article 43 shall apply to Assistant Ministers as they apply to Ministers.
(4) Parliament shall by law make provision for the remuneration of Assistant Ministers.

Article 43B: Parliamentary Secretaries

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(1) The President may after consultation with the Prime Minister may appoint Parliamentary Secretaries from among the members of either House of Parliament, including a Majority Leader in each House.
(2) Parliamentary Secretaries shall assist Ministers and Assistant Ministers in the discharge of their duties and functions and represent the administration in Parliament.
(3) A Parliamentary Secretary may at any time resign his office, and his appointment as such may be determined at any time by the Prime Minister.
(3) The provisions of Clauses (5) and (6) of Article 43 shall apply to Parliamentary Secretaries as they apply to Ministers.
(4) Parliament shall by law make provision for the remuneration of Parliamentary Secretaries.

Chapter 4—Federal Legislature

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Article 44: Constitution of Parliament

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The legislative authority of the Federation shall be vested in a Parliament, which shall consist of the two Houses of Parliament to be known as the Senate and the House of Representatives.

Article 45: Composition of Senate

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(1) The Senate shall consist of three members for each State and for each of the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Metropolitan Manila and Labuan who shall be elected by the direct vote of the electors of that State or Federal Territory.
(2) (Repealed).
(3) The term of office of a member of the Senate shall, subject to the provisions of the Seventh Schedule, be six years and shall commence on the on the thirtieth day of December next following his election, and one-third of the members of the Senate shall retire on the expiration of every second year in accordance with the provisions contained in that Schedule.
(4) A general election for members of the Senate shall be held on the second Tuesday of November, in 1965 and every second year thereafter.

Article 46: Composition of House of Representatives

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(1) The House of Representatives shall consist of two hundred and seventy-two elected members.
(2) There shall be—
(a) one hundred and four members from the States of Malaya;
(b) sixteen members from Sabah;
(c) twenty-four members from Sarawak;
(d) three members from Brunei;
(e) fifteen members from Singapore; and
(f) one hundred and ten members from the Philippine States.
(2A) For the purposes of membership of the House of Representatives–
(a) the States of Malaya shall be deemed to include the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur;
(b) the Philippine States shall be deemed to include the Federal Territory of Metropolitan Manila; and
(c) the State of Sabah shall be deemed to include the Federal Territory of Labuan.
(3) The House of Representatives shall continue from the date of its first meeting until the date of the first meeting of the House next following.
(4) A general election for the House of Representatives shall be held on the second Tuesday of November, in 1965 and every fourth year thereafter.
(5) The President after consultation with the Speaker may dissolve the House of Representatives:
Provided that no dissolution of the House of Representatives shall be made within six months of any general election to that House.
(6) Whenever the House of Representatives is dissolved a general election shall be held within sixty days from the date of the dissolution, on a date determined by the President:
Provided that no general election shall be held less than forty-five days from the date of the dissolution.

Article 47: Qualifications for membership of Parliament

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Every citizen resident in the Federation is qualified to be a member—
(a) of the Senate, if he is not less than thirty years old;
(b) of the House of Representatives, if he is not less than twenty-one years old,
unless he is disqualified for being a member by this Constitution or by any law made in pursuance of Article 48.

Article 48: Disqualification for membership of Parliament

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(1) Subject to the provisions of this Article, a person is disqualified for being a member of either House of Parliament if—
(a) he is and has been found or declared to be of unsound mind; or
(b) he is an undischarged bankrupt; or
(c) he holds an office of profit; or
(d) having been nominated for election as President, as Vice-President, as the Governor of a State, to either House of Parliament, or to either House of the Legislature of a State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House), or having acted as election agent to a person so nominated, he has failed to lodge any return of election expenses required by law within the time and in the manner so required; or
(e) he has been convicted of an offence by a court of law in the Federation (or, before Malaysia Day, in the territories comprised in a Borneo State or in Singapore or in a Philippine State) and sentenced to imprisonment for a term of not less than one year or to a fine of not less than two thousand pesos and has not received a free pardon; or
(f) he has voluntarily acquired citizenship of, or exercised rights of citizenship in, a foreign country or has made a declaration of allegiance to a foreign country.
(2) Federal law may impose, for such periods as may be specified thereby, disqualification for membership of either House of Parliament on persons committing offences in connection with elections; and any person who has been convicted of such an offence or has in proceedings relating to an election been proved guilty of an act constituting such an offence, shall be disqualified accordingly for a period so specified.
(3) The disqualification of a person under paragraph (d) or paragraph (e) of Clause (1) may be removed by the President and shall, if not so removed, cease at the end of the period of five years beginning with the date on which the return mentioned in the said paragraph (d) was required to be lodged, or, as the case may be, the date on which the person convicted as mentioned in the said paragraph (e) was released from custody or the date on which the fine mentioned in the said paragraph (e) was imposed on such person; and a person shall not be disqualified under paragraph (f) of Clause (1) by reason only of anything done by him before he became a citizen.

Article 49: Provisions against double memberships

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(1) A person shall not at the same time be a member of either House of Parliament and the President, the Vice-President, or the Governor of a State not having a Ruler.
(2) A person shall not at the same time be a member of both Houses of Parliament, nor be elected to the House of Representatives for more than one constituency or to the Senate for more than one State.

Article 50: Effect of disqualification, and prohibition of nomination or appointment without consent

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(1) If a member of either House of Parliament becomes disqualified for membership of that House his seat shall become vacant.
(2) If a person disqualified for being a member of the House of Representatives is elected to that House or if a person disqualified for being a member of the Senate is elected or appointed to the Senate, or if an election or appointment to either House is contrary to Article 49, the election or appointment shall be void.
(3) (Repealed).
(4) A person cannot be validly nominated for election to membership of either House or appointed to the Senate without his consent.

Article 51: Resignation of members

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A member of either House of Parliament may resign his membership by writing under his hand addressed, if he is a member of the Senate, to the President of the Senate, and if a member of the House of Representatives, to the Speaker of that House.

Article 52: Absence of a member

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If a member of either House of Parliament is without the leave of the House absent from every sitting of the House for a period of six months the House may declare his seat vacant.

Article 53: Decisions as to disqualification

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(1) If any question arises whether a member of a House of Parliament has become disqualified for membership, the decision of that House shall be taken and shall be final:
Provided that this Article shall not be taken to prevent the practice of the House postponing a decision in order to allow for the taking or determination of any proceedings that may affect the decision (including proceedings for the removal of the disqualification).
(2) Where a member of either House of Parliament becomes disqualified under paragraph (e) of Clause (1) of Article 48 or under a federal law made in pursuance of Clause (2) of Article 48, Clause (1) shall not apply and he shall cease to be a member of that House, and his seat shall become vacant, immediately upon his disqualification taking effect in accordance with Clause (4) of Article 48.

Article 54: Vacancies in Senate and casual vacancies

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(1) Save as provided under Clause (2), whenever there is a vacancy among members of the Senate or a casual vacancy among members of the House of Representatives, such vacancy or casual vacancy shall be filled within sixty days from the date on which it is established by the Election Commission that there is a vacancy or casual vacancy, as the case may be, and an election shall be held accordingly:
Provided that, if a casual vacancy in the House of Representatives is established on a date within six months of the date of a general election to that House, such casual vacancy shall not be filled.
(2) Whenever there is a casual vacancy among members of the House of Representatives elected for a group representation constituency, such vacancy or casual vacancy shall be filled–
(a) by the return of the person ranked highest amongst the vacating member’s group and who was not already returned (whether under this clause or otherwise); or
(b) where the vacancy cannot be filled under paragraph (b), by the return of a person co-opted by the Electoral Commission, acting after consultation with the representatives of such political party (if any) as the candidates in that group may belong to.
(3) For the purposes of clause (2), “group” has the same meaning as in Article 117B.

Article 55: Sessions of Parliament

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(1) The President summon Parliament in accordance with the provisions of this Article.
(2) The President shall prorogue Parliament–
(a) on a date not later than one hundred and twenty days from the date of its summoning for its regular session;
(b) on a date not later than thirty days from the date of its summoning for a special session; and
(c) whenever he dissolves the House of Representatives.
(3) Parliament shall be summoned to meet for its regular session twice every year, on the fourth Monday of January and on the fourth Monday of July.
(4) The President shall summon Parliament for a special session–
(a) whenever in his opinion the public interest so requires;
(b) whenever the Prime Minister, or not less than one-third of the members of either House of Parliament, so request; or
(c) on a date not later than thirty days from the date of a general election, unless within that period Parliament is summoned for its regular session.
(5) Where Parliament is summoned for a special session under clause (4) not later than one hundred and twenty days from the date on which Parliament would be summoned for its regular session, the special session so summoned shall be deemed to be a regular session and, for the purposes of clause (2), to have commenced on that date on which a regular session would have been summoned.

Article 56: President and Deputy President of Senate

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(1) The Senate shall from time to time choose one of its members to be President of the Senate and one to be Deputy President of the Senate, and shall transact no business while the office of President of the Senate is vacant other than the election of a President.
(2) A member holding office as President or Deputy President of the Senate shall cease to hold his office on the expiry of the term for which he was elected a member or on otherwise ceasing to be a member of the Senate, and may at any time resign his office.
(3) During any vacancy in the office of President of the Senate or during any absence of the President from any sitting, the Deputy President or, if the Deputy President is also absent or if his office is also vacant, such other member as may be determined by the rules of procedure of the Senate, shall act as President.
(4) If a member of either House of the Legislature of a State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House) is chosen to be President of the Senate he shall resign from that House before exercising the functions of his office.

Article 57: Speaker and Deputy Speakers of the House of Representatives

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(1) The House of Representatives shall from time to time choose one of its members to be Speaker, and shall transact no business while the office of Speaker is vacant other than the election of a Speaker.
(1A) The House of Representatives shall from time to time choose eight Deputy Speakers from among its members of the House, so that–
(a) one Deputy Speaker shall be chosen from among members for the States of Malaya;
(b) one Deputy Speaker shall be chosen from among members for the State of Brunei;
(c) one Deputy Speaker shall be chosen from among members for the State of Sabah;
(d) one Deputy Speaker shall be chosen from among members for the State of Sarawak;
(e) one Deputy Speaker shall be chosen from among members for the State of Singapore;
(f) one Deputy Speaker shall be chosen from among members for the States of Ilocos, Cagayan Valley, Central Luzon, Southern Tagalog, and Bicol, and for the Federal Territory of Metropolitan Manila;
(g) one Deputy Speaker shall be chosen from among members for the States of Western Visayas, Central Visayas, and Eastern Visayas; and
(h) one Deputy Speaker shall be chosen from among members for the States of Western Mindanao, Northern Mindanao, and Southern Mindanao.
(2) The Speaker may at any time resign his office by writing under his hand addressed to the Clerk of the House of Representatives, and shall vacate his office—
(a) when the House first meets after a general election;
(b) on his ceasing to be a member of the House otherwise than by reason of a dissolution thereof;
(c) if the House at any time so resolves.
(2A) A Deputy Speaker may at any time resign his office by writing under his hand addressed to the Clerk of the House of Representatives, and shall vacate his office—
(a) when the House first meets after a general election;
(b) on his ceasing to be a member of the House otherwise than by reason of a dissolution thereof;
(c) if the House at any time so resolves.
(3) During any vacancy in the office of Speaker or during any absence of the Speaker from any sitting, otherwise than by reason of the House first meeting after a general election, such Deputy Speaker or, if all of the Deputy Speakers are absent or if all their offices are vacant, such other member, as may be determined by the rules of procedure of the House, shall act as Speaker.
(4) If a member of either House of the Legislature of a State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House) is chosen to be Speaker he shall resign from that House before exercising the functions of his office.

Article 58: Remuneration of President, Deputy President, Speaker and Deputy Speakers

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Parliament shall by law provide for the remuneration of the President and Deputy President of the Senate and the Speaker and Deputy Speakers of the House of Representatives, and the remuneration so provided for the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representative shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.

Article 59: Oaths by members

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(1) Every member of either House of Parliament shall before taking his seat take and subscribe before the person presiding in the House an oath in the form set out in the Sixth Schedule, but a member may before taking that oath take part in the election of a President of the Senate or Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(2) If a member has not taken his seat within three months from the date on which the House first sits after his election or such further time as the House may allow, his seat shall become vacant.

Article 60: Address by the President

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(1) The President shall annually address both Houses of Parliament jointly, and in such address he shall give Parliament information on the state of the Federation and recommend to its consideration such measures as he considers to be necessary or expedient.
(2) The President may otherwise address either House or both Houses jointly.

Article 61: Special provisions as to Cabinet and Attorney General

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(1) Every member of the Cabinet shall have the right to take part in the proceedings of either House of Parliament.
(1A) Either House of Parliament may require any member of the Cabinet to appear before it and answer questions and interpellations made by its members.
(1B) Written questions under clause (1A) shall be submitted to the presiding officer of the House concerned at least three days before a member of the Cabinet is called to appear before that House; Interpellations may be made regarding any of the matters provided for in the written questions, and any other matter related or incidental thereto.
(2) Either House of Parliament may appoint as a member of any of its committees the Attorney General or any member of the Cabinet notwithstanding that he is not a member of that House.
(3) This Article does not authorize any person who is not a member of a House to vote in that House or any of its committees.
(4) In this Article “member of the Cabinet” includes an Assistant Minister and a Parliamentary Secretary.

Article 61A: Question hour

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(1) The House of Representatives shall conduct a question hour as often as may be determined by the rules of procedure of the House of Representatives, but there shall be at least one question hour in every one month.
(2) During such question hour, the Prime Minister shall appear and answer questions and interpellations made by the members of the House of Representatives.

Article 62: Parliamentary procedure

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(1) Subject to the provisions of this Constitution and of federal law, each House of Parliament shall regulate its own procedure.
(2) Each House may act notwithstanding any vacancy in its membership, and the presence or participation of any person not entitled thereto shall not invalidate any proceedings.
(3) Subject to Clauses (4) and (6) and to Clause (1) of Article 89 and Clause (3) of Article 159 and to sections 10 and 11 of the Thirteenth Schedule, each House shall, if not unanimous, take its decision by a simple majority of members voting; and the person presiding shall have both an original vote and, whenever necessary to avoid an equality of votes, also a casting vote.
(4) In regulating its procedure each House may provide, as respects any decision relating to its proceedings, that it shall not be made except by a specified majority or by a specified number of votes.
(5) Members absent from a House shall not be allowed to vote.
(6) In proceedings—
(a) under Clause (1) of Article 30C, where the person presiding is a member for or from any State other than a Philippine State, he shall cast his vote whenever necessary to avoid an equality of votes, but shall not vote in any other case; or
(b) under Clause (1) of Article 30C, where the person presiding is a member for or from any State other than a State of Malaya, he shall cast his vote whenever necessary to avoid an equality of votes, but shall not vote in any other case.

Article 62A: Commission on Appointments

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(1) There shall be a Commission on Appointments consisting of the President of the Senate as chairman, the Speaker of the House of Representatives as vice-chairman, twelve other members of the Senate and twelve other members of the House of Representatives.
(2) The twelve other members of the Commission on Appointments from either House of Parliament shall be chosen so that–
(a) three shall be chosen from among members for the States of Malaya;
(b) one shall be chosen from among members for the State of Brunei;
(c) one shall be chosen from among members for the State of Sabah;
(d) one shall be chosen from among members for the State of Sarawak;
(e) two shall be chosen from among members for the State of Singapore; and
(f) four shall be chosen from among members for the Philippine States.
(3) The chairman may vote on any question before the Commission on Appointments but shall not have a casting vote.
(4) The twelve other members of the Commission on Appointments from either House of Parliament shall be chosen within sixty days from the date of that House first meets after every general election thereto.
(5) The Commission on Appointments shall be summoned to meet by the chairman as often as he considers necessary but there shall be no meetings while Parliament is prorogued.
(6) The Commission on Appointments shall, for the purposes of Article 62, be deemed to be a committee of Parliament.

Article 62B: Recess Appointments

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Where the President makes an appointment which under this Constitution requires the consent of the Commission on Appointments while Parliament is prorogued, such appointment shall be valid notwithstanding that the consent of the Commission has not been obtained:
Provided that, when Parliament is summoned to meet next after the making of that appointment, such appointment shall be referred to the Commission on Appointments and shall, where it is not confirmed by the Commission, be void.

Article 63: Privileges of Parliament

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(1) The validity of any proceedings in either House of Parliament or any committee thereof shall not be questioned in any court.
(2) No person shall be liable to any proceedings in any court in respect of anything said or any vote given by him when taking part in any proceedings of either House of Parliament or any committee thereof.
(3) No person shall be liable to any proceedings in any court in respect of anything published by or under the authority of either House of Parliament.

Article 64: Remuneration of members

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Parliament shall by law provide for the remuneration of members of each House.

Article 65: Clerks of Senate and House of Representatives

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(1) There shall be a Clerk to the Senate and a Clerk to the House of Representatives.
(2) The Clerk to the Senate and the Clerk to the House of Representatives shall be appointed by the President with the consent of the Commission on Appointments from among members of the general public service of the Federation and each shall hold office until he attains the age of compulsory retirement for members of the general public service unless he sooner resigns his office or is transferred to another office in the general public service.
(3) The persons holding the office of the Clerk to the Senate and Clerk to the House of Representatives immediately prior to the coming into force of this Clause shall, unless either person has not attained the age of fifty-five years and has opted to become a member of the general public service of the Federation, continue to hold office respectively on terms and conditions not less favourable than those applicable to him immediately before such coming into operation and shall not be removed from office except on the like grounds and in the like manner as a judge of the Federal Court, and in this respect the representation mentioned in Clause (3) of Article 125 shall be a representation made by the President of the Senate or, as the case may be, the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
(4) Except as otherwise expressly provided by this Article, the qualifications for appointment and conditions of service of the Clerk to the Senate and the Clerk to the House of Representatives, and of members of the staff of the Houses of Parliament, may be regulated by federal law.
(5) The Clerk to the Senate, the Clerk to the House of Representatives and members of the staff of Parliament are disqualified for being members of either House of Parliament or either House of the Legislature of any State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House).

Chapter 5—Legislative procedure

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Article 66: Exercise of legislative power

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(1) The power of Parliament to make laws shall be exercised by Bills passed by both Houses (or, in the cases mentioned in Article 68, the House of Representatives or both Houses jointly, as the case may be) and, except as otherwise provided in this Article, assented to by the President.
(2) Subject to Article 67, a Bill may originate in either House.
(3) When a Bill has been passed by the House in which it originated it shall be sent to the other House; and it shall be presented to the President for his assent when it has been passed by the other House and agreement has been reached between the two Houses on any amendments made in it or when it is required to be so presented under Article 68.
(4) The President shall within twenty days after a Bill is presented to him—
(a) assent to the Bill by causing the Public Seal to be affixed thereto; or
(b) if it is not a money Bill or a Bill for making any amendment to the Constitution other than an amendment excepted pursuant to Article 159, return the Bill to the House in which it originated with a statement of the reasons for his objection to the Bill, or to any provision thereof.
(4A) If the President returns a Bill to the House in which it originated in accordance with Clause (4)(b), the House shall as soon as possible proceed to reconsider the Bill. If after such reconsideration the Bill is passed by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the total number of members of that House, with or without amendment, it shall be sent together with the objections to the other House, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and if similarly approved by members of that House, the Bill shall become law in the like manner as if the President had assented to it.
(4B) If a Bill is not assented to by the President within the time specified in Clause (4)(a) hereof, it shall become law at the expiration of the time as specified in Clause (4)(a) in the like manner as if he had assented to it.
(5) A Bill shall become law on being assented to by the President or as provided in Clause (4A) or (4B), but no law shall come into force until it has been published, without prejudice, however, to the power of Parliament to postpone the operation of any law or to make laws with retrospective effect.
(6) Nothing in this Article or in Article 68 shall invalidate any law confirming an undertaking given by the Federal Government to the effect that a Bill to which the undertaking relates shall not be presented to the President for his assent except in accordance with the undertaking.

Article 66A: Inquiries

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(1) Either House of Parliament or any of its committees may conduct inquiries in aid of legislation, as provided by its rules of procedure.
(2) The rights of persons appearing in, or affected by, such inquiries shall be respected.

Article 67: Restriction on introduction of Bills and moving of amendments involving taxation, expenditure, etc.

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(1) A Bill or amendment making provision (whether directly or indirectly) for—
(a) imposing or increasing any tax or abolishing, reducing or remitting any existing tax;
(b) the borrowing of money, or the giving of any guarantee, by the Federation, or the amendment of the law relating to the financial obligations of the Federation;
(c) the custody of the Consolidated Fund, the charging of any money on the Consolidated Fund or the abolition or alteration of any such charge;
(d) the payment of moneys into the Consolidated Fund or the payment, issue or withdrawal from the Consolidated Fund of any moneys not charged thereon, or any increase in the amount of such a payment, issue or withdrawal;
(e) the compounding or remission of any debt due to the Federation;
(f) the assignment of a tax or fee or the making of a grant to any State;
(g) the receipt of moneys on account of the Consolidated Fund or the custody or issue of such moneys or the audit of the accounts of the Federation or a State,
being provision as respects which the Minister charged with responsibility for finance signifies that it goes beyond what is incidental only and not of a substantial nature having regard to the purposes of the Bill or amendment shall not be introduced or moved except by a Minister, and a Bill making any such provision shall not be introduced in the Senate.
(2) A Bill or amendment shall not be deemed to make provision for any of the said matters by reason only that it provides—
(a) for the imposition or alteration of any fine or other pecuniary penalty or for the payment or demand of a licence fee or a fee or charge for any service rendered; or
(b) for the imposition, alteration or regulation of any tax or rate by any local authority or body for local purposes.

Article 68: Assent to Bills passed by Special Procedure

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(1) Where a money Bill is passed by the House of Representatives and, having been sent to the Senate at least one month before the end of the session, is not passed by the Senate without amendment within a month, it shall be presented to the President for his assent unless the House of Representatives otherwise directs.
(2) Where—
(a) a Bill which is not a money Bill is passed by one House and, having been sent to the other House at least one month before the end of the session, is not passed by the second-mentioned House or is passed by the second-mentioned House with amendments to which the first-mentioned House does not agree; and
(b) in the following session (whether or not a general election to either House has intervened) but not earlier than one year after it was first passed by the first-mentioned House the same Bill, with no other alterations than those mentioned in Clause (3), is passed again by the first-mentioned House and sent to the second-mentioned House at least one month before the end of the session and is not passed by the second-mentioned House or is passed by the second-mentioned House with amendments to which the first-mentioned House does not agree,
the Bill shall be referred to both Houses of Parliament jointly, and where passed by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the total number of members of both Houses in the case of a Bill for making any amendment to the Constitution other than an amendment excepted pursuant to Article 159, and by a simple majority in the case of any other Bill, be presented to the President for his assent with those amendments mentioned in Clause (3A), if any.
(3) The alterations referred to in Clause (2) are alterations certified by the Speaker of the House of Representatives to be necessary owing to the time which has elapsed since the Bill was passed in the earlier session or to represent amendments made in that session by the Senate.
(3A) The amendments referred to in Clause (2) are alterations which–
(a) have been agreed to by both Houses; or
(b) have been agreed to by one House only and subsequently approved by both Houses jointly.
(4) When a Bill is presented to the President in pursuance of this Article it shall bear a certificate of the Speaker of the House of Representatives that the provisions of this Article have been complied with, and that certificate shall be conclusive for all purposes and shall not be questioned in any court.
(5) This Article does not apply to any Bill for making any amendment to this Constitution, other than an amendment excepted from the provisions of Clause (3) of Article 159.
(6) In this Article and in Article 66 “money Bill” means a Bill which, containing in the opinion of the Speaker of the House of Representatives only provisions dealing with all or any of the following matters, that is to say:
(a) the matters mentioned in Clause (1) of Article 67 or the regulation of any tax;
(b) the reduction of any such amount as is mentioned in paragraph (d) of Clause (1) of Article 67; and
(c) any matter incidental to those matters or any of them,
is certified by him as a money Bill.

Chapter 6—Capacity as respects property, contracts and suits

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Article 69: Capacity of Federation as respects property, contracts and suits

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(1) The Federation has power to acquire, hold and dispose of property of any kind and to make contracts.
(2) The Federation may sue and be sued.

PART V
THE STATES

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Article 70: Precedence of Rulers and Governors

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(1) Subject to the precedence of the President and the Vice-President, the Rulers and Governors of the States shall take precedence over all other persons and each Ruler or Governor shall in his own State take precedence over the other Rulers and Governors.
(2) Subject to Clause (1), the Rulers and Governors shall take precedence among themselves, in accordance with the dates on which they acceded as Rulers, or assumed office as Governors, as the case may be; and if Rulers acceded, or Governors assumed office, on the same day, the older shall take precedence over the younger.

Article 71: Federal guarantee of State Constitutions

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(1) The Federation shall guarantee the right of a Ruler of a State to succeed and to hold, enjoy and exercise the constitutional rights and privileges of Ruler of that State in accordance with the Constitution of that State; but any dispute as to the title to the succession as Ruler of any State shall be determined solely by such authorities and in such manner as may be provided by the Constitution of that State.
(2) Clause (1) shall, with the necessary modifications, apply in relation to a Ruling Chief of Negeri Sembilan as it applies to the Ruler of a State.
(3) If it appears to Parliament that in any State any provision of this Constitution or of the Constitution of that State is being habitually disregarded, Parliament may, notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, by law make provision for securing compliance with those provisions.
(4) If at any time the Constitution of any State does not contain the provisions set out in Part I of the Eighth Schedule, with or without the modifications allowed under Clause (5) or (5A) (hereinafter referred to as “the essential provisions”) or provisions substantially to the same effect, or contains provisions inconsistent with the essential provisions, Parliament may, notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, by law make provision for giving effect in that State to the essential provisions or for removing the inconsistent provisions.
(5) The provisions set out in Part I of the Eighth Schedule may be modified by substituting for sections 2, 4 and 9, whether jointly or severally and whether or not to one section only, the provisions set out in Part II of that Schedule as an alternative thereto—
(a) in the case of every State—
(i) as respects the provisions set out in section 2 and 4 of that Schedule, until the dissolution of the second Legislative Assembly constituted in accordance with those provisions or those provisions so modified after Merdeka Day; and
(ii) as respects the provisions set out in section 9 of that Schedule, until the dissolution of the second Legislative Assembly constituted in accordance with those provisions or those provisions so modified after Malaysia Day;
(b) in the case of Perlis, until such further time as the Legislature of that State may resolve, being not later than the end of August 1975,
and where the said provisions are so modified under this clause no modifications under clause (5A) may be made.
(5A) The provisions set out in Part I of the Eighth Schedule may be modified indefinitely as provided in Parts IIA and IIB of that Schedule, but no such modification may be made partially.
(6) A law made for a State in pursuance of this Article shall, unless sooner repealed by Parliament, cease to have effect on such day as a new Legislature, constituted in that State after the passing of the law, may resolve.
(7) In relation to a Borneo State—
(a) Clause (5) shall not apply; but
(b) until the end of August 1975, Clause (4) shall apply as if the reference to the modifications allowed under Clause (5) were a reference to the modifications made by the Constitution of the State as in force on Malaysia Day.
(8) In relation to Singapore Clauses (4) to (6) shall not apply, but no enactment of the Legislature of Singapore making in the Constitution of the State amendments relating to any matter dealt with by the provisions set out in Part I of the Eighth Schedule (as it applies to Singapore) shall have effect unless—
(a) the amendments do not materially affect the operation of the Constitution in relation to those matters; or
(b) the effect of the amendments is confined to inserting provisions so set out or provisions substantially to the same effect (whether or not in substitution for other provisions) or to removing provisions inconsistent with the provisions so set out; or
(c) the enactment is approved by Act of Parliament.
(9) In relation to a Philippine State—
(a) Clause (5) shall not apply; and
(b) the provisions set out in Part I of the Eighth Schedule shall be modified as provided in Parts IV and V of that Schedule.

Article 72: Privileges of State Legislature

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(1) The validity of any proceedings in either House of the Legislature of any State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House) or any committee thereof shall not be questioned in any court.
(2) No person shall be liable to any proceedings in any court in respect of anything said or any vote given by him when taking part in proceedings of either House of the Legislature of any State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House) or of any committee thereof.
(3) No person shall be liable to any proceedings in any court in respect of anything published by or under the authority of either House of the Legislature of any State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House).

PART VI
RELATIONS BETWEEN THE FEDERATION AND THE STATES

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Chapter 1—Distribution of legislative powers

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Article 73: Extent of federal and State laws

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In exercising the legislative powers conferred on it by this Constitution—
(a) Parliament may make laws for the whole or any part of the Federation and laws having effect outside as well as within the Federation;
(b) the Legislature of a State may make laws for the whole or any part of that State.

Article 74: Subject matter of federal and State laws

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(1) Without prejudice to any power to make laws conferred on it by any other Article, Parliament may make laws with respect to any of the matters enumerated in the Federal List or the Concurrent List (that is to say, the First or Third List set out in the Ninth Schedule).
(2) Without prejudice to any power to make laws conferred on it by any other Article, the Legislature of a State may make laws with respect to any of the matters enumerated in the State List (that is to say, the Second List set out in the Ninth Schedule) or the Concurrent List.
(3) The power to make laws conferred by this Article is exercisable subject to any conditions or restrictions imposed with respect to any particular matter by this Constitution.
(4) Where general as well as specific expressions are used in describing any of the matters enumerated in the Lists set out in the Ninth Schedule the generality of the former shall not be taken to be limited by the latter.

Article 75: Inconsistencies between federal and State laws

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If any State law is inconsistent with a federal law, the federal law shall prevail and the State law shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void.

Article 76: Power of Parliament to legislate for States in certain cases

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(1) Parliament may make laws with respect to any matter enumerated in the State List, but only as follows, that is to say:
(a) for the purpose of implementing any treaty, agreement or convention between the Federation and any other country, or any decision of an international organization of which the Federation is a member; or
(b) for the purpose of promoting uniformity of the laws of two or more States; or
(c) if so requested by the Legislature of any State.
(2) (Repealed).
(3) Subject to Clause (4), a law made in pursuance of paragraph (b) or paragraph (c) of Clause (1) shall not come into operation in any State until it has been adopted by a law made by the Legislature of that State, and shall then be deemed to be a State law and not a federal law, and may accordingly be amended or repealed by a law made by that Legislature.
(4) Parliament may, for the purpose only of ensuring uniformity of law and policy, make laws with respect to land tenure, the relations of landlord and tenant, registration of titles and deeds relating to land, transfer of land, mortgages, leases and charges in respect of land, easements and other rights and interests in land, compulsory acquisition of land, rating and valuation of land, and local government; and paragraph (b) of Clause (1) and Clause (3) shall not apply to any law relating to any such matter.

Article 76A: Power of Parliament to extend legislative powers of States

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(1) It is hereby declared that the power of Parliament to make laws with respect to a matter enumerated in the Federal List includes power to authorize the Legislatures of the States or any of them, subject to such conditions or restrictions (if any) as Parliament may impose, to make laws with respect to the whole or any part of that matter.
(2) Notwithstanding Article 75, a State law made under authority conferred by Act of Parliament as mentioned in Clause (1) may, if and to the extent that the Act so provides, amend or repeal (as regards the State in question) any federal law passed before that Act.
(3) Any matter with respect to which the Legislature of a State is for the time being authorized by Act of Parliament to make laws shall for purposes of Articles 79, 80 and 82 be treated as regards the State in question as if it were a matter enumerated in the Concurrent List.

Article 77: Residual power of legislation

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The Legislature of a State shall have power to make laws with respect to any matter not enumerated in any of the Lists set out in the Ninth Schedule, not being a matter in respect of which Parliament has power to make laws.

Article 78: Legislation restricting use of rivers

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In so far as any law made by Parliament or any regulation made in pursuance of such a law restricts the rights of a State or its residents to the use for navigation or irrigation of any river wholly within that State it shall not have effect in that State unless it has been approved by a resolution of each House of the Legislature of any State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House) supported by a majority of the total number of its members.

Article 79: Exercise of concurrent legislative powers

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(1) Where it appears to the presiding officer of either House of Parliament or of either House of the Legislature of any State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House) that a Bill or an amendment to a Bill proposes a change in the law relating to any of the matters enumerated in the Concurrent List, or to any of the matters enumerated in the State List with respect to which the Federation is exercising functions in accordance with Article 94, he shall certify the Bill or amendment for the purposes of this Article.
(2) A Bill or amendment certified under this Article shall not be proceeded with until four weeks have elapsed since its publication, unless the presiding officer, being satisfied that the State Governments, or as the case may be, the Federal Government, have been consulted, allows it to be proceeded with on the ground of urgency.

Chapter 2—Distribution of executive powers

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Article 80: Distribution of executive powers

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(1) Subject to the following provisions of this Article the executive authority of the Federation extends to all matters with respect to which Parliament may make laws, and the executive authority of a State to all matters with respect to which the Legislature of that State may make laws.
(2) The executive authority of the Federation does not extend to any matter enumerated in the State List, except in so far as is provided in Articles 93 to 95, nor to any matter enumerated in the Concurrent List, except in so far as may be provided by federal or State law; and so far as federal or State law confers executive authority on the Federation with respect to any matter enumerated in the Concurrent List it may do so to the exclusion of the executive authority of the State.
(3) So far as a law made under Clause (4) of Article 76 makes provisions for conferring executive authority on the Federation it shall not operate in any State unless approved by resolution of each House of the Legislature of that State (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House).
(4) Federal law may provide that the executive authority of a State shall extend to the administration of any specified provisions of federal law and may for that purpose confer powers and impose duties on any authority of the State.
(5) Subject to any provisions of federal or State law, arrangements may be made between the Federation and a State for the performance of any functions by the authorities of the one on behalf of the authorities of the other and such arrangements may provide for the making of payments in respect of any costs incurred under the arrangements.
(6) Where, in pursuance of Clause (4), any functions are conferred by federal law on any authority of a State the Federation shall make such payments to the State as may be agreed between the Federation and the State or as may in default of agreement be determined by a tribunal appointed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.

Article 81: Obligations of States towards Federation

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The executive authority of every State shall be so exercised—
(a) as to ensure compliance with any federal law applying to that State; and
(b) as not to impede or prejudice the exercise of the executive authority of the Federation.

Chapter 3—Distribution of financial burdens

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Article 82: Financing of expenditure relating to matters on Concurrent List

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Where any law or executive action relating to any of the matters enumerated in the Concurrent List involves expenditure, such action shall be taken under this Constitution as will ensure that, unless otherwise agreed, the burden of that expenditure is borne—
(a) by the Federation, if the expenditure results either from federal commitments or from State commitments undertaken in accordance with federal policy and with the specific approval of the Federal Government;
(b) by the State or States concerned, if the expenditure results from State commitments undertaken by the State or States on its or their own authority.

Chapter 4—Land

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Article 83: Acquisition of land for federal purposes

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(1) If the Federal Government is satisfied that land in a State, not being alienated land, is needed for federal purposes, that Government may, after consultation with the State Government, require the State Government, and it shall then be the duty of that Government, to cause to be made to the Federation, or to such public authority as the Federal Government may direct, such grant of the land as the Federal Government may direct:
Provided that the Federal Government shall not require the grant of any land reserved for a State purpose unless it is satisfied that it is in the national interest so to do.
(2) Where in accordance with Clause (1) the Federal Government requires the State Government to cause to be made a grant of land in perpetuity, the grant shall be made without restrictions as to the use of the land but shall be subject to the payment annually of an appropriate quit rent and the Federation shall pay to the State a premium equal to the market value for the grant; and where the Federal Government so requires the State Government to cause to be granted any other interest in land, the Federation shall pay to the State the just annual rent therefor and such premium, if any is required by the State Government, as may be just:
Provided that if the value of the land has been increased by means of any improvement made (otherwise than at the expense of the State) while the land was reserved for federal purposes, the increase shall not be taken into consideration in determining the market value, rent or premium for the purposes of this Clause.
(3) Where a requirement is made under Clause (1) in respect of any land which, at the date of the requirement, was intended for any State purpose, then if—
(a) other land is acquired by the State for that purpose in substitution for the first-mentioned land; and
(b) the cost of the land so acquired exceeds the amount paid by the Federation (otherwise than as rent) in accordance with Clause (2) in respect of the interest granted to the Federation, the Federation shall pay to the State such sum as may be just in respect of the excess.
(4) Where a further grant is made in pursuance of this Article in respect of land an interest in which is vested in the Federation or any public authority, any sums payable by way of premium under Clause (2) in respect of the further grant shall be reduced by an amount equal to the market value of any improvements made (otherwise than at the expense of the State) since that interest became vested as aforesaid.
(5) The foregoing provisions of this Article (except Clause (3)) shall apply in relation to alienated land as they apply in relation to land not being alienated land, but subject to the following modifications:
(a) in Clause (1), the words “after consultation with the State Government” shall be omitted;
(b) where a requirement is made under that Clause, it shall be the duty of the State Government to cause to be acquired by agreement or compulsorily such interest in the land as may be necessary for complying with the requirement;
(c) any expenses incurred by the State in or in connection with the acquisition of land in accordance with paragraph (b) shall be repaid by the Federation, except that if the acquisition is by agreement the Federation shall not, unless it is party to the agreement, be liable to pay more than it would have paid on a compulsory acquisition;
(d) any sums paid by the Federation to the State in accordance with paragraph (c) shall be taken into consideration in determining for the purposes of Clause (2) the market value, the appropriate quit rent or the just annual rent, and shall be deducted from any premium to be paid by the Federation under that Clause.
(6) Where a grant is made to the Federation in pursuance of Clause (1) in respect of land which, or an interest in which, was acquired by the State Government at the expense of the Government of the Federation of Malaya before Merdeka Day, paragraph (d) of Clause (5) shall apply to the sums paid in respect of the acquisition by the Government of the Federation of Malaya as if they were sums paid by the Federation in accordance with paragraph (c) of Clause (5); and Clause (3) shall not apply to any such land.
(7) Nothing in this Article shall prevent the reservation of land in a State for federal purposes on such terms and conditions as may be agreed between the Federal Government and the Government of the State, or affect the power of the appropriate authority in a State to acquire in accordance with any law for the time being in force any alienated land for federal purposes without a requirement by the Federal Government under this Article.

Article 84: Reversion to States of land held for federal purposes

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(1) Where any interest in land in a State vested in the Federation or a public authority for federal purposes ceases to be required for federal purposes, it shall revert to that State if the State Government agrees to pay to the Federation—
(a) in a case where the land, or an interest therein, was acquired by the State Government in pursuance of Clause (5) of Article 83, or was acquired by the State Government at the expense of the Government of the Federation of Malaya before Merdeka Day, an amount equal to the market value of the interest vested in the Federation or public authority;
(b) in any other case, at the option of the State Government, either—
(i) an amount equal to the market value of that interest; or
(ii) an amount equal to the sums paid (otherwise than as rent) by the Federation, or by the Government of the Federation of Malaya before Merdeka Day, in respect of the grant of that interest, together with the market value of any improvements made (otherwise than at the expense of the State) to the land after that grant.
(2) Where any interest in land to which Clause (1) applies does not revert to the State in accordance with that Clause, the Federal Government or the public authority, as the case may be, may sell the interest on such terms and conditions as that Government or authority may think fit.

Article 85: Grant to Federation of land reserved for federal purposes

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(1) Where any land in a State which is reserved for any federal purposes ceases to be required for those purposes, the Federal Government shall offer to release the land to the State on condition that the State pays to the Federation—
(a) the market value of any improvements made (otherwise than at the expense of the State) while the land was in use for federal purposes; and
(b) the amount, if any, paid by the Federation, or paid before Merdeka Day by the Government of the Federation of Malaya, in respect of the cost of acquisition of any interest in the land by the State Government, and if the State Government accepts the offer the reservation shall cease.
(2) Where the State Government does not accept an offer made in accordance with Clause (1), then, unless by agreement between the Federal Government and the State Government the land is reserved for another federal purpose, the Federal Government may require the State Government, and it shall then be the duty of that Government, to cause to be made to the Federation a grant of the land in perpetuity without restrictions as to the use of the land, but subject to the payment of a premium equal to the market value of the land reduced by the amounts which would have been payable to the Federation under Clause (1) if the said offer had been accepted, and to the payment annually of an appropriate quit rent; and where such a grant is made to the Federation, the Federal Government may sell and transfer or lease the land on such terms and conditions as it may think fit.
(3) Except as provided by this Article, land in a State which is reserved for federal purposes shall not cease to be so reserved, and all land so reserved shall be controlled and managed by or on behalf of the Federal Government.

Article 86: Disposition of land vested in the Federation

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(1) Where any interest in land is vested in the Federation, the Federation may, subject to Article 84 and to Clause (2) of this Article, dispose of that interest or any smaller interest in the land.
(2) Every such disposition of an interest in land shall be made conditional on the land being used for a federal purpose specified therein, and no such disposition shall be made to a person other than a public authority except—
(a) under and in accordance with the provisions of federal law; or
(b) by an order of the President laid and approved in accordance with Clause (3):
Provided that nothing in this Clause shall apply to a disposition authorized by Article 84 or Article 85, or to a disposition by the Federation to any person for the purposes of the implementation of any treaty, agreement or convention with any other country, or to any person in his capacity as consular or diplomatic representative of any other country.
(3) An order of the President under paragraph (b) of Clause (2) shall be laid before both Houses of Parliament and shall not take effect until it is approved by resolution of each House.
(4) Except as provided by Article 84, no interest in land vested for federal purposes in a public authority, or vested in any other person by virtue of a disposition under this Article, shall be disposed of by that authority or person otherwise than to the Federation.
(5) Where any interest in land in a State is disposed of by or to the Federation or any public authority in pursuance of this Article or of Article 84 or 85, it shall be the duty of the Government of that State to register the transaction accordingly.
(6) The foregoing provisions of this Article shall not apply to any land or interest in land in the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur, the Federal Territory of Metropolitan Manila or the Federal Territory of Labuan howsoever vested in the Federation, and the Federation may dispose of such land or interest.

Article 87: Determination of disputes as to land values

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(1) Where any dispute arises between the Federal Government and a State Government as to the making of any payment by or to the Federation under the foregoing Articles of this Chapter, or as to the amount of any such payment, the dispute shall be referred, at the instance either of the Federal Government or of the State Government, to the Lands Tribunal appointed in accordance with this Article.
(2) The Lands Tribunal shall consist of—
(a) a chairman, who shall be appointed by the Chief Justice of the Federal Court and who shall be, or have been, or be qualified to be a judge of the Supreme Court or a High Court, or shall before Malaysia Day have been a judge of the Supreme Court of the Federation of Malaya or the Supreme Court of the Republic of the Philippines;
(b) a member who shall be appointed by the Federal Government; and
(c) a member who shall be appointed by the State Government.
(3) The practice and procedure of the Lands Tribunal shall be regulated by rules of court framed by the Rules Committee or other authority having power under written law to make rules or orders regulating the practice and procedure of the Federal Court.
(4) An appeal shall lie from the Lands Tribunal to the Federal Court on any question of law.

Article 88: Application of Articles 83 to 87 to Malacca, Penang, Borneo States, Singapore and Philippine States

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In their application to Malacca, Penang, the Borneo States, Singapore and the Philippine States, Articles 83 to 87 shall have effect—
(a) subject to such adaptations (if any) as Parliament may by law provide, being adaptations required to secure that they apply (as nearly as practicable having regard to differences in the system of land tenure) in the same manner as they apply to other States; and
(b) in the case of the Borneo States, Singapore and the Philippine States with the omission in paragraph (a) of Clause (5) of Article 83.

Article 89: Malay reservations

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(1) Any land in a State which immediately before Merdeka Day was a Malay reservation in accordance with the existing law may continue as a Malay reservation in accordance with that law until otherwise provided by an Enactment of the Legislature of that State, being an Enactment—
(a) passed by a majority of the total number of members of each House of that Legislature (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House) and by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the members present and voting; and
(b) approved by resolution of each House of Parliament passed by a majority of the total number of members of that House and by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the members voting.
(2) Any land in a State which is not for the time being a Malay reservation in accordance with the existing law and has not been developed or cultivated may be declared as a Malay reservation in accordance with that law:
Provided that—
(a) where any land in a State is declared a Malay reservation under this Clause, an equal area of land in that State which has not been developed or cultivated shall be made available for general alienation; and
(b) the total area of land in a State for the time being declared as a Malay reservation under this Clause shall not at any time exceed the total area of land in that State which has been made available for general alienation in pursuance of paragraph (a).
(3) Subject to Clause (4), the Government of any State may, in accordance with the existing law, declare as a Malay reservation—
(a) any land acquired by that Government by agreement for that purpose;
(b) on the application of the proprietor, and with the consent of every person having a right or interest therein, any other land.
(4) Nothing in this Article shall authorize the declaration as a Malay reservation of any land which at the time of the declaration is owned or occupied by a person who is not a Malay or in or over which such a person has then any right or interest.
(5) Without prejudice to Clause (3), the Government of any State may, in accordance with law, acquire land for the settlement of Malays or other communities, and establish trusts for that purpose.
(6) In this Article “Malay reservation” means land reserved for alienation to Malays or to natives of the State in which it lies; and “Malay” includes any person who, under the law of the State in which he is resident, is treated as a Malay for the purposes of the reservation of land.
(7) Subject to Article 161A, this Article shall have effect notwithstanding any other provision of this Constitution; but (without prejudice to any such other provision) no land shall be retained or declared as a Malay reservation except as provided by this Article and Article 90.
(8) The provisions of this Article shall apply to the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur in the like manner that they apply to a State, save that Clause (1) in its application to the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur shall be modified to read that any land in the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur which immediately before Merdeka Day was a Malay reservation in accordance with the existing law may continue as a Malay reservation in accordance with that law until otherwise provided by an Act of Parliament passed by a majority of the total number of members of each House of Parliament and by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the members present and voting in each House.

Article 90: Special provisions relating to customary land in Negeri Sembilan and Malacca, and Malay holdings in Terengganu

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(1) Nothing in this Constitution shall affect the validity of any restrictions imposed by law on the transfer or lease of customary land in the State of Negeri Sembilan or the State of Malacca, or of any interest in such land.
(2) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, the existing law in the State of Terengganu with respect to Malay holdings shall continue in force until otherwise provided by an Enactment of the Legislature of that State passed and approved as described in Clause (1) of Article 89.
(3) Any such Enactment of the Legislature of the State of Terengganu may make provision for Malay reservations corresponding with the existing law in force in any other State of a Ruler; and in that event the said Article 89 shall have effect in relation to Terengganu subject to the following modifications, that is to say:
(a) in Clause (1), for the reference to land which immediately before Merdeka Day was a Malay reservation in accordance with the existing law, there shall be substituted a reference to land which, immediately before the passing of the said Enactment, was a Malay holding; and
(b) subject as aforesaid, any reference to the existing law shall be construed as a reference to the said Enactment.

Article 91: National Land Council

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(1) There shall be a National Land Council consisting of a Minister as chairman, one representative from each of the States, who shall be appointed by the Ruler or Governor, and such number of representatives of the Federal Government as that Government may appoint but, subject to clause (5) of Article 95E and clause (5) of Article 95G, the number of representatives of the Federal Government shall not exceed ten.
(2) The chairman may vote on any question before the National Land Council but shall not have a casting vote.
(3) The National Land Council shall be summoned to meet by the chairman as often as he considers necessary but there shall be at least one meeting in every year.
(4) If the chairman or a representative of a State or of the Federal Government is unable to attend a meeting, the authority by whom he was appointed may appoint another person to take his place at that meeting.
(5) It shall be the duty of the National Land Council to formulate from time to time in consultation with the Federal Government, the State Governments and the National Finance Council a national policy for the promotion and control of the utilization of land throughout the Federation for mining, agriculture, forestry or any other purpose, and for the administration of any laws relating thereto; and the Federal and State Governments shall follow the policy so formulated.
(6) The Federal Government or the Government of any State may consult the National Land Council in respect of any other matter relating to the utilization of land or in respect of any proposed legislation dealing with land or of the administration of any such law, and it shall be the duty of the National Land Council to advise that Government on any such matters.

Chapter 5—National development

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Article 92: National development plan

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(1) If, after a recommendation from an expert committee and after consultation with the National Finance Council, the National Land Council and the Government of any State concerned, the President is satisfied that it is conducive to the national interest that a development plan be put into operation in any area or areas in one or more of the States, the President may, after publishing the plan, proclaim the area or areas as a development area; and thereupon Parliament shall have power to give effect to the development plan or any part thereof, notwithstanding that any of the matters to which the plan relates are matters with respect to which, apart from this Article, only States would have power to make laws.
(2) Any Act passed in pursuance of this Article shall recite that it has been so passed and that the provisions of Clause (1) have been complied with; and Article 79 shall not apply to any Bill for such an Act or any amendment to such a Bill.
(3) In this Article, “development plan” means a plan for the development, improvement, or conservation of the natural resources of a development area, the exploitation of such resources, or the increase of means of employment in the area.
(4) Without prejudice to their power under any other Article to require any interest in land to be acquired or granted for federal purposes, the Federal Government may from time to time require the reservation for the purposes of a development plan, to such extent as they may specify, of any land in a development area which is not occupied by private persons; but any diminution, in consequence of the reservation, of the annual revenue received by a State shall be made good to the State by the Federation.
(5) All income received by the Federation through the operation of a development plan shall, subject to Clause (6), be applied—
(a) in the first instance, for the provision of capital and the meeting of working expenses for the development plan;
(b) in the second instance, for the repayment to the Federation of any expenditure, including expenditure under Clause (4), incurred by the Federation in operating the plan; and
(c) as to the balance, for payments to the State in which the development area is situated or, if it is situated in two or more States, to those States in such proportions as the Federal Government may determine.
(6) If it is agreed between the Federal Government and the Government of any State which includes the whole or any part of the development area that any expenditure incurred in operating the development plan is to be met by the State, any expenditure so met shall be repaid to the State and the repayment shall rank pari passu with the repayment to the Federation of any expenditure incurred by the Federation.
(7) Parliament may repeal or amend any Act passed in pursuance of this Article, and for that purpose may make such incidental and consequential provisions as it may consider necessary.
(8) Nothing in this Article shall affect the power of Parliament or of the Legislature of any State—
(a) to impose such taxes or rates as it is authorized to impose under any other provision of this Constitution; or
(b) to make from the Federal Consolidated Fund or the State Consolidated Fund, as the case may be, grants not repayable under Clause (5) or (6),
except that where, in pursuance of Clause (1), a rate is imposed on any property by federal law which, but for this Article, might have been imposed by State law, no rate of the same kind shall be imposed by State law for any period for which the rate imposed by federal law is payable.

Chapter 6—Federal surveys, advice to States and inspection of State activities

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Article 93: Inquiries, surveys and statistics

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(1) The Federal Government may conduct such inquiries (whether by Commission or otherwise), authorize such surveys and collect and publish such statistics as it thinks fit, notwithstanding that such inquiries, surveys and collection and publication of statistics relate to a matter with regard to which the Legislature of a State may make laws.
(1A) Either House of Parliament or any committee thereof may conduct such inquiries (whether by Commission or otherwise), authorize such surveys and collect and publish such statistics as it thinks fit, as provided by its rules of procedure, notwithstanding that such inquiries, surveys and collection and publication of statistics relate to a matter with regard to which the Legislature of a State may make laws.
(2) It shall be the duty of the Government of a State, and of all officers and authorities thereof, to assist the Federal Government, or either House of Parliament or any committee thereof, as the case may be, in the execution of its powers under this Article; and for this purpose the authority exercising those powers may give such directions as it may deem necessary.

Article 94: Federal powers in respect of State subjects

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(1) The executive authority of the Federation extends to the conduct of research, the provision and maintenance of experimental and demonstration stations, the giving of advice and technical assistance to the Government of any State, and the provision of education, publicity, and demonstration for the inhabitants of any State, in respect of any of the matters with respect to which the Legislature of a State may make laws; and the agricultural and forestry officers of any State shall accept any professional advice given to the Government of that State under this Clause.
(2) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, the existing Departments of Agriculture, Commissioner of Lands, Forestry and Social Welfare may continue to exercise the functions exercised by them immediately before Merdeka Day.
(3) Nothing in this Constitution shall prevent the Federal Government from establishing Ministries or Departments of Government to exercise the functions of the Federal Government under Article 93 and this Article in relation to matters within the legislative authority of a State, and such matters may include soil conservation, local government and town and country planning.

Article 95: Inspection of State activities

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(1) Subject to Clause (3), in exercising the executive authority of the Federation any officer authorized by the Federal Government may inspect any department or work of a State Government with a view to making a report thereon to the Federal Government.
(2) A report made under this Article shall, if the Federal Government so direct, be communicated to the State Government and laid before the Legislative Assembly of the State.
(3) This Article does not authorize the inspection of any department or work dealing only with or carried on only with respect to matters within the exclusive legislative authority of a State.

Chapter 7—National Council for Local Government

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Article 95A: National Council for Local Government

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(1) There shall be a National Council for Local Government consisting of a Minister as Chairman, one representative from each of the States, who shall be appointed by the Ruler or Governor, and such number of representatives of the Federal Government as that Government may appoint but, subject to clause (5) of Article 95E and clause (5) of Article 95G, the number of representatives of the Federal Government shall not exceed ten.
(2) The Chairman may vote on any question before the National Council for Local Government and shall have a casting vote.
(3) The National Council for Local Government shall be summoned to meet by the Chairman as often as he considers necessary but there shall be at least one meeting in every year.
(4) If the Chairman or a representative of a State or of the Federal Government is unable to attend a meeting, the authority by whom he was appointed may appoint another person to take his place at that meeting.
(5) It shall be the duty of the National Council for Local Government to formulate from time to time in consultation with the Federal Government and the State Governments a national policy for the promotion, development and control of local government throughout the Federation and for the administration of any laws relating thereto; and the Federal and State Governments shall follow the policy so formulated.
(6) It shall also be the duty of the Federal Government and the Government of any State to consult the National Council for Local Government in respect of any proposed legislation dealing with local government, and it shall be the duty of the National Council for Local Government to advise those Governments on any such matter.
(7) The Federal Government or the Government of any State may consult the National Council for Local Government in respect of any other matter relating to local government, and it shall be the duty of the National Council for Local Government to advise that Government on any such matter.

Chapter 8—Application to Borneo States, Singapore and Philippine States

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Article 95B: Modifications for Borneo States and Singapore

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(1) In the case of the Borneo States and Singapore—
(a) the appropriate supplement to List II set out in the Ninth Schedule shall be deemed to form part of the State List, and the matters enumerated therein shall be deemed not to be included in the Federal List or Concurrent List; and
(b) the appropriate supplement to List III set out in the Ninth Schedule shall, subject to the State List, be deemed to form part of the Concurrent List, and the matters enumerated therein shall be deemed not to be included in the Federal List (but not so as to affect the construction of the State List, where it refers to the Federal List).
(2) Where by virtue of Clause (1) an item is included in the Concurrent List for a State for a period only, the expiration or termination of that period shall not affect the continued operation of any State law passed by virtue of the item, save as provided by federal or State law.
(3) The Legislature of a Borneo State may also make laws for imposing sales taxes, and any sales tax imposed by State law in a Borneo State shall be deemed to be among the matters enumerated in the State List and not in the Federal List; but—
(a) there shall not in the charging or administration of a State sales tax be any discrimination between goods of the same description according to the place in which they originate; and
(b) the charge for any federal sales tax shall be met out of sums collected from a person liable for that tax before the charge for a State sales tax.

Article 95C: Modifications for Philippine States

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(1) Parliament may make separate laws for the whole or any part of the Philippine States with respect to any of the matters of mandatory separate legislation or of optional separate legislation, and members of either House of Parliament for or from any State other than a Philippine State (with the exception of the presiding officer of that House) shall not be members of that House for the purposes of any proceedings relating to such separate laws.
(2) No law made by Parliament relating to the matters of mandatory separate legislation shall have effect within the Philippine States unless such law is made–
(a) pursuant to clause (1); or
(b) for the purpose of implementing any treaty, agreement or convention between the Federation and any other country, or any decision of an international organization of which the Federation is a member; or
(c) for the purpose of promoting uniformity of the laws having effect within and outside of the Philippine States.
(3) A law made under paragraph (c) of clause (2) shall not be passed without the consent of the Conference of Rulers and Governors.
(4) If any law made pursuant to clause (1) is inconsistent with any other law made by Parliament, the other law shall prevail and the law made pursuant to clause (1) shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void.
(5) The Legislature of a Philippine State may make laws for imposing sales taxes, and any sales tax imposed by State law in a Philippine State shall be deemed to be among the matters enumerated in the State List and not in the Federal List; but—
(a) there shall not in the charging or administration of a State sales tax be any discrimination between goods of the same description according to the place in which they originate; and
(b) the charge for any federal sales tax shall be met out of sums collected from a person liable for that tax before the charge for a State sales tax.
(6) For the purposes of this Article–
“matters of mandatory separate legislation” means the matters––
(a) enumerated in supplement IIB set out in the Ninth Schedule, with the exclusion of item 20 therein; or
(b) to which clause (4) of Article 76 applies;
“matters of no separate legislation” means the matters enumerated in the Federal List, not being matters of mandatory separate legislation or matters enumerated in supplement IIIB set out in the Ninth Schedule; and
“matters of optional separate legislation” means all matters in respect of which Parliament has power to make laws other than matters of mandatory separate legislation or of no separate legislation.

Article 95D: Power by order to extend legislative or executive powers of Borneo States

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(1) Subject to the provisions of any Act of Parliament passed after Malaysia Day, the President may by order make as respects a Borneo State any such provision as may be made by Act of Parliament—
(a) for authorizing the Legislature of the State to make laws as mentioned in Article 76A; or
(b) for extending the executive authority of the State, and the powers or duties of any authority of the State, as mentioned in Clause (4) of Article 80.
(2) An order made by virtue of paragraph (a) of Clause (1) shall not authorize the Legislature of a State to amend or repeal an Act of Parliament passed after Malaysia Day, unless the Act so provides.
(3) Clause (3) of Article 76A and Clause (6) of Article 80 shall apply in relation to an order under paragraph (a) and paragraph (b) respectively of Clause (1) of this Article as they apply in relation to an Act of Parliament.
(4) Where an order under this Article is revoked by a later order, the later order may include provision for continuing in force (generally or to such extent or for such purposes as the order may specify) any State law passed by virtue of the earlier order or any subsidiary legislation made or thing done under any such State law, and from the coming into operation of the later order any State law thereby continued in force shall have effect as federal law:
Provided that no provision shall be continued in force by virtue of this Clause if or in so far as it could not have been made by Act of Parliament.
(5) Any order of the President under this Article shall be laid before each House of Parliament.

Article 95E: Separate national plans for land utilization, local government, development, etc. for States of Malaya and Philippine States

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(1) In relation to the States of Malaya and in relation to the Philippine States, Articles 91 and 95A shall have effect subject to the following Clauses.
(2) Subject to Clause (3), under Article 91 and under Article 95A–
(a) the National Land Council and the National Council for Local Government shall each formulate separate policies in respect of the States of Malaya and in respect of the Philippine States;
(b) the Government of any State of Malaya shall not be required to follow the policy formulated by the National Land Council or by the National Council for Local Government, as the case may be, in respect of the Philippine States, but the representative of the State shall not be entitled to vote on questions before the Council which relate to the Philippine States; and
(c) the Government of any Philippine State shall not be required to follow the policy formulated by the National Land Council or by the National Council for Local Government, as the case may be, in respect of the States of Malaya, but the representative of the State shall not be entitled to vote on questions before the Council which relate to the States of Malaya.
(3) Clause (2) shall cease to apply, as regards either Article 91 or Article 95A, or both, if Parliament so provides with the concurrence of the Conference of Rulers.
(4) Where clause (2) of Article 95G ceases to apply—
(a) to Singapore, Singapore shall for the purposes of this Clause be deemed to be a State of Malaya; and
(a) to any Borneo State, such State shall for the purposes of this Clause be deemed to be a Philippine State.
(5) Where clause (2) ceases to apply, eleven shall be added to the maximum number of representatives of the Federal Government on the National Land Council or National Council of Local Government.

Article 95F: Exclusion for Borneo States and Singapore of Parliament’s power to pass uniform laws about land or local government

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(1) Subject to clause (2), in relation to a Borneo State and in relation to Singapore, Clause (4) of Article 76 shall not apply, nor shall paragraph (b) of Clause (1) of that Article enable Parliament to make laws with respect to any of the matters mentioned in Clause (4) of that Article.
(2) This Article shall cease to have effect in the case of Singapore if Parliament with the concurrence of the Governor so provides.

Article 95G: Exclusion of Borneo States and Singapore from national plans for land utilization, local government, development, etc.

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(1) In relation to a Borneo State and in relation to Singapore, Articles 91, 92, 94 and 95A shall have effect subject to the following Clauses.
(2) Subject to clause (5), under Article 91 and under Article 95A the State Government shall not be required to follow the policy formulated by the National Land Council or by the National Council for Local Government, as the case may be, but the representative of the State shall not be entitled to vote on questions before the Council.
(3) Under Article 92 no area in the State shall be proclaimed a development area for the purposes of any development plan without the concurrence of the Governor.
(4) Under clause (1) of Article 94 (under which in respect of matters in the State List the Federation may conduct research, give advice and technical assistance, etc.) the agricultural and forestry officers of a Borneo State shall consider, but shall not be required to accept, professional advice given to the Government of the State.
(5) Clause (2) shall cease to apply—
(a) as regards Article 91, to Singapore, if Parliament so provides with the concurrence of the Governor; and
(b) as regards Article 95A, to any State, if Parliament so provides with the concurrence of each House of the Legislature (or, where such Legislature consists of one House only, that House).
(6) For each representative of a Borneo State or of Singapore becoming entitled, by virtue of clause (5), to vote on questions before the National Land Council or National Council of Local Government, one shall be added to the maximum number of representatives of the Federal Government on that Council:
Provided that, until clause (2) of Article 95E ceases to apply, no such increase shall be brought into effect unless the number of representatives of the States of Malaya and of Singapore who are entitled to vote on questions before that Council is equal to the number of representatives of the States of Borneo and of the Philippine States who are so entitled.

PART VII
FINANCIAL PROVISIONS

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Chapter 1—General

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Article 96: No taxation unless authorized by law

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No tax or rate shall be levied by or for the purposes of the Federation except by or under the authority of federal law.

Article 97: Consolidated Funds

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(1) All revenues and moneys howsoever raised or received by the Federation shall, subject to the provisions of this Constitution and of federal law, be paid into and form one fund, to be known as the Federal Consolidated Fund.
(2) All revenues and moneys howsoever raised or received by a State shall, subject to Clause (3) and to any law, be paid into and form one fund, to be known as the Consolidated Fund of that State.
(3) (Repealed).
(4) Unless the context otherwise requires, any reference in this Constitution to the Consolidated Fund shall be construed as a reference to the Federal Consolidated Fund.

Article 98: Expenditure charged on Federal Consolidated Fund

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(1) There shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund, in addition to any grant, remuneration or other moneys so charged by any other Article or federal law—
(a) all pensions, compensation for loss of office and gratuities for which the Federation is liable;
(b) all debt charges for which the Federation is liable; and
(c) any moneys required to satisfy any judgment, decision or award against the Federation by any court or tribunal.
(2) In making payment of any grant to a State in accordance with the provisions of this Part, the Federation may deduct the amount of any debt charges payable to the Federation by the State and charged on the Consolidated Fund of that State.
(3) For the purposes of this Article debt charges include interest, sinking fund charges, the repayment or amortisation of debt, and all expenditure in connection with the raising of loans on the security of the Consolidated Fund and the service and redemption of debt created thereby.

Article 99: Annual financial statement

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(1) The President shall, in respect of every financial year, cause to be laid before the House of Representatives a statement of the estimated receipts and expenditure of the Federation for that year, and, unless Parliament in respect of any year otherwise provides, that statement shall be so laid before the commencement of that year:
Provided that there may be separate statements of estimated receipts and estimated expenditure, and in that case it shall not be necessary for the statement of receipts to be so laid before the commencement of the year to which it relates.
(2) The estimates of expenditure shall show—
(a) the total sums required to meet expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund; and
(b) subject to Clause (3), the sums required to meet the expenditure for other purposes proposed to be met from the Consolidated Fund.
(3) The sums to be shown under paragraph (b) of Clause (2) do not include—
(a) sums representing the proceeds of any loan raised by the Federation for specific purposes and appropriated for those purposes by the Act authorizing the raising of the loan;
(b) sums representing any money or interest on money received by the Federation subject to a trust and to be applied in accordance with the terms of the trust;
(c) sums representing any money held by the Federation which has been received or appropriated for the purpose of any trust fund established by or in accordance with federal law.
(4) The said statement shall also show, so far as is practicable, the assets and liabilities of the Federation at the end of the last completed financial year, the manner in which those assets are invested or held, and the general purposes in respect of which those liabilities are outstanding.

Article 100: Supply Bills

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The expenditure to be met from the Consolidated Fund but not charged thereon, other than expenditure to be met by such sums as are mentioned in Clause (3) of Article 99, shall be included in a Bill, to be known as a Supply Bill, providing for the issue from the Consolidated Fund of the sums necessary to meet that expenditure and the appropriation of those sums for the purposes specified therein.

Article 101: Supplementary and excess expenditure

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If in respect of any financial year it is found—
(a) that the amount appropriated by the Supply Act for any purpose is insufficient, or that a need has arisen for expenditure for a purpose for which no amount has been appropriated by the Supply Act; or
(b) that any moneys have been expended for any purpose in excess of the amount (if any) appropriated for that purpose by the Supply Act,
a supplementary estimate showing the sums required or spent shall be laid before the House of Representatives and the purposes of any such expenditure shall be included in a Supply Bill.

Article 102: Power to authorize expenditure on account or for unspecified purposes

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Parliament shall have power in respect of any financial year—
(a) before the passing of the Supply Bill, to authorize by law expenditure for part of the year;
(b) to authorize by law expenditure for the whole or part of the year otherwise than in accordance with Articles 99 to 101, if owing to the magnitude or indefinite character of any service or to circumstances of unusual urgency it appears to Parliament to be desirable to do so.

Article 103: Contingencies Fund

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(1) Parliament may by law provide for the creation of a Contingencies Fund and for authorizing the Minister charged with responsibility for finance, if satisfied that there has arisen an urgent and unforeseen need for expenditure for which no other provision exists, to make advances from the Contingencies Fund to meet that need.
(2) Where any advance is made in accordance with Clause (1), a supplementary estimate shall be presented and a Supply Bill introduced as soon as possible for the purpose of replacing the amount so advanced.

Article 104: Withdrawals from Consolidated Fund

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(1) Subject to Clause (2), no moneys shall be withdrawn from the Consolidated Fund unless they are—
(a) charged on the Consolidated Fund; or
(b) authorized to be issued by a Supply Act; or
(c) authorized to be issued under Article 102.
(2) Clause (1) does not apply to any such sums as are mentioned in Clause (3) of Article 99.
(3) No moneys shall be withdrawn from the Consolidated Fund except in the manner provided by federal law.

Article 105: Auditor General

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(1) There shall be an Auditor General, who shall be appointed by the President with the consent of the Commission on Appointments.
(2) A person who has held the office of Auditor General shall be eligible for reappointment but shall not be eligible for any other appointment in the service of the Federation or for any appointment in the service of a State.
(3) The Auditor General may at any time resign his office but shall not be removed from office except on the like grounds and in the like manner as a judge of the Supreme Court.
(4) Parliament shall by law provide for the remuneration of the Auditor General, and the remuneration so provided shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.
(5) The remuneration and other terms of office (including pension rights) of the Auditor General shall not be altered to his disadvantage after his appointment.
(6) Subject to the provisions of this Article, the terms and conditions of service of the Auditor General shall be determined by federal law and, subject to the provisions of federal law, by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

Article 106: Powers and duties of Auditor General

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(1) The accounts of the Federation and of the States shall be audited and reported on by the Auditor General.
(2) The Auditor General shall perform such other duties and exercise such powers in relation to the accounts of the Federation and of the States and to the accounts of other public authorities and of those bodies which are specified by order made by the President, as may be provided by federal law.

Article 107: Reports of Auditor General

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(1) The Auditor General shall submit his reports to the President, who shall cause them to be laid before the House of Representatives.
(2) A copy of any such report relating to the accounts of a State, or to the accounts of any public authority exercising powers conferred by State law, shall be submitted to the Ruler or Governor of that State, who shall cause it to be laid before the Legislative Assembly.

Article 108: National Finance Council

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108. (1) There shall be a National Finance Council consisting of the Prime Minister, such other Ministers as the Prime Minister may designate, and one representative from each of the States, appointed by the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri.

(2) The National Finance Council shall be summoned to meet by the Prime Minister as often as he considers necessary and whenever the representatives of three or more States demand a meeting, but there shall be at least one meeting in every twelve months.
(3) At any meeting of the National Finance Council the Prime Minister may be represented by another Minister of the Federation, and the Prime Minister or, if he is not present, the Minister representing him, shall preside.
(4) It shall be the duty of the Federal Government to consult the National Finance Council in respect of—
(a) the making of grants by the Federation to the States;
(b) the assignment to the States of the whole or any portion of the proceeds of any federal tax or fee;
(c) the annual loan requirements of the Federation and the States and the exercise by the Federation and the States of their borrowing powers;
(d) the making of loans to any of the States;
(e) the making of development plans in accordance with Article 92;
(f) the matters referred to in Item 7(f) and (g) of the Federal List;
(g) any proposal to introduce a Bill for such a law as is mentioned in Clause (2) of Article 109 or Clause (3) or (3A) of Article 110;
(h) any other matter in respect of which this Constitution or federal law makes provision for consultation with the National Finance Council.
(5) The Federal Government may consult the National Finance Council in respect of any other matter, whether or not it involves questions of finance, and the government of a State may consult the said Council in respect of any matter which affects the financial position of that State.

Article 109: Grants to States

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109. (1) The Federation shall make to each State in respect of each financial year—

(a) a grant, to be known as a capitation grant, which shall be calculated in accordance with the provisions of Part I of the Tenth Schedule;
(b) a grant for the maintenance of State roads, to be known as the State road grant, which shall be calculated in accordance with the provisions of Part II of that Schedule.
(2) Parliament may from time to time by law vary the rates of the capitation grant; but if the effect of any such law is to reduce the grant, provision shall be made in that law for securing that the amount of grant received by any State in respect of any financial year is not less than ninety per cent of the amount received by that State in the preceding financial year.
(3) Parliament may by law make grants for specific purposes to any of the States on such terms and conditions as may be provided by any such law.
(4) The amounts required for making the grants mentioned in the preceding provisions of this Article shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.
(5) If, in accordance with Article 103, a Contingencies Fund is created, the power to make advances from that Fund for meeting an urgent and unforeseen need for expenditure shall include power to make such advances to a State for meeting such a need.
(6) The Federation shall pay into a fund, to be known as the State Reserve Fund—
(a) (Repealed);
(b) in respect of every financial year such sum as the Federal Government may, after consultation with the National Finance Council, determine to be necessary, and the Federation may from time to time, after consultation with the National Finance Council, make grants out of the State Reserve Fund to any State for the purposes of development or generally to supplement its revenues.

Article 110: Assignment of taxes and fees to the States

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110. (1) Subject to Clause (2), each of the States shall receive all proceeds from the taxes, fees and other sources of revenue specified in Part III of the Tenth Schedule so far as collected, levied or raised within the State.

(2) Parliament may from time to time by law substitute for any source of revenue specified in section 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 12 or 14 of Part III of the Tenth Schedule or for any source of revenue so substituted, another source of revenue of substantially equal value.
(3) Each State shall receive, on such terms and conditions as may be provided by or under federal law, ten per cent or such greater amount as may be so provided of the export duty on tin produced in the State.
(3A) Parliament may by law provide that each State shall receive, on such terms and conditions as may be prescribed by or under federal law, such proportion as may be so prescribed of the export duty on minerals (other than tin) produced in the State.
In this Article “minerals” means mineral ores, metal and mineral oils.
(3B) Without prejudice to the power to impose conditions conferred by Clause (3) or (3A), Parliament may by law provide for prohibiting or restricting, in, or except in, such cases as may be provided by or under the law, the levying of royalties on or similar charges in respect of minerals (whether under a lease or other instrument or under any State enactment, and whether the instrument was made or the enactment passed before or after the coming into operation of this Clause).
(4) Without prejudice to the provisions of Clauses (1) to (3A), Parliament may by law—
(a) assign to the States the whole or any portion of the proceeds of any tax or fee raised or levied by the Federation; and
(b) assign to the States the responsibility of collecting for State purposes any tax or fee authorized by federal law.
(5) The amounts receivable by the States under Clause (1), (2) or (4) shall not be paid into the Consolidated Fund; and the amounts receivable by the States under Clauses (3) and (3A) shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.

Article 111: Restriction on borrowing

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111. (1) The Federation shall not borrow except under the authority of federal law.

(2) A State shall not borrow except under the authority of State law, and State law shall not authorize a State to borrow except from the Federation or, for a period not exceeding five years, from a bank or other financial source approved for that purpose by the Federal Government, and subject to such conditions as may be specified by the Federal Government.
(3) A State shall not give any guarantee except under the authority of State law, and such guarantee shall not be given except with the approval of the Federal Government and subject to such conditions as may be specified by it.

Article 112: Restriction on alterations in establishments of States

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112. (1) Subject to Clause (2), no State shall, without the approval of the Federation, make any addition to its establishment or the establishment of any of its departments, or alter the rates of established salaries and emoluments, if the effect of doing so would be to increase the liability of the Federation in respect of pensions, gratuities or other like allowances.

(2) This Article does not apply to—
(a) non-pensionable appointments the maximum salaries of which do not exceed four hundred ringgit per month or such other amount as may be fixed by order by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong; or
(b) pensionable appointments the maximum salaries of which do not exceed one hundred ringgit per month or such other amount as may be fixed by order by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

Chapter 2—Application to States of Sabah and Sarawak

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Article 112A: State audits in States of Sabah and Sarawak

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112A. (1) The Auditor General shall submit his reports relating to the accounts of each of the States of Sabah and Sarawak, or to the accounts of any public authority exercising powers vested in it by the State law in either of those States, to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong (who shall cause them to be laid before the House of Representatives) and to the Yang di-Pertua Negeri of the State; and accordingly Clause (2) of Article 107 shall not apply to those reports.

(2) The Yang di-Pertua Negeri shall cause any such report submitted to him to be laid before the Legislative Assembly.
(3) The powers and duties of the Auditor General in relation to the accounts mentioned in Clause (1) for any period ending before the year 1969 shall, in the State of Sabah or Sarawak, be exercised and discharged on his behalf by the senior officer of his department for the time being stationed in the State in question:
Provided that during the absence or incapacity of that officer, or a vacancy in his post, those powers and duties shall be exercised and discharged by the Auditor General or such officer of his department as he may designate.

Article 112B: Borrowing powers of States of Sabah and Sarawak

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112B. Clause (2) of Article 111 shall not restrict the power of the State of Sabah or Sarawak to borrow under the authority of State law within the State, if the borrowing has the approval of the Central Bank for the time being of the Federation.

Article 112C: Special grants and assignments of revenue to States of Sabah and Sarawak

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112C. (1) Subject to the provisions of Article 112D and to any limitation expressed in the relevant section of the Tenth Schedule—

(a) the Federation shall make to the States of Sabah and Sarawak in respect of each financial year the grants specified in Part IV of that Schedule; and
(b) each of those States shall receive all proceeds from the taxes, fees and dues specified in Part V of that Schedule, so far as collected, levied or raised within the State, or such part of those proceeds as is so specified.
(2) The amounts required for making the grants specified in the said Part IV, and the amounts receivable by the State of Sabah or Sarawak under section 3 or 4 of the said Part V, shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund; and the amounts otherwise receivable by the State of Sabah or Sarawak under the said Part V shall not be paid into the Consolidated Fund.
(3) In Article 110, Clauses (3A) and (4) shall not apply to the State of Sabah or Sarawak.
(4) Subject to Clause (5) of Article 112D, in relation to the State of Sabah or Sarawak Clause (3B) of Article 110—
(a) shall apply in relation to all minerals, including mineral oils; but
(b) shall not authorize Parliament to prohibit the levying of royalties on any mineral by the State or to restrict the royalties that may be so levied in any case so that the State is not entitled to receive a royalty amounting to ten per cent ad valorem (calculated as for export duty).

Article 112D: Reviews of special grants to States of Sabah and Sarawak

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112D. (1) The grants specified in section 1 and subsection (1) of section 2 of Part IV of the Tenth Schedule, and any substituted or additional grant made by virtue of this Clause, shall at the intervals mentioned in Clause (4) be reviewed by the Governments of the Federation and the States or State concerned, and if they agree on the alteration or abolition of any of those grants, or the making of another grant instead of or as well as those grants or any of them, the said Part IV and Clause (2) of Article 112C shall be modified by order of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong as may be necessary to give effect to the agreement:

Provided that on the first review the grant specified in subsection (2) of section 1 of the said Part IV shall not be brought into question except for the purpose of fixing the amounts for the ensuing five years.
(2) Any review under this Article shall take into account the financial position of the Federal Government, as well as the needs of the States or State concerned, but (subject to that) shall endeavour to ensure that the State revenue is adequate to meet the cost of State services as they exist at the time of the review, with such provision for their expansion as appears reasonable.
(3) The period for which provision is to be made on a review shall be a period of five years or (except in the case of the first review) such longer period as may be agreed between the Federation and the States or State concerned; but any order under Clause (1) giving effect to the results of a review shall continue in force after the end of that period, except in so far as it is superseded by a further order under that Clause.
(4) A review under this Article shall not take place earlier than is reasonably necessary to secure that effect can be given to the results of the review from the end of the year 1968 or, in the case of a second or subsequent review, from the end of the period provided for by the preceding review; but, subject to that, reviews shall be held as regards both the States of Sabah and Sarawak for periods beginning with the year 1969 and with the year 1974, and thereafter as regards either of them at such time (during or after the period provided for on the preceding review) as the Government of the Federation or of the State may require.
(5) If on the occasion of any review under this Article the Government of the Federation gives notice to the States or State concerned of their intention to vary any of the assignments of revenue under Part V of the Tenth Schedule (including any substituted or additional assignment made by virtue of this Clause), or to vary Clause (4) of Article 112C, the review shall take the variation into account, and provision shall be made by order of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong so as to give effect to the variation from the beginning of the period provided for on the review:
Provided that this Clause shall not apply to the assignments under sections 4, 7 and 8, and shall not apply to that under section 5 or 6 until the second review.
(6) If on any review the Federal Government and the Government of a State are unable to reach agreement on any matter, it shall be referred to an independent assessor, and his recommendations thereon shall be binding on the governments concerned and shall be given effect as if they were the agreement of those governments.
(7) Clause (4) of Article 108 shall not apply to require the Federal Government to consult the National Finance Council in respect of matters arising under this Article.
(8) Any order of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong under this Article shall be laid before each House of Parliament.

Article 112E: (Financial arrangements with Singapore—Repealed)

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112E. (Repealed).

PART VIII
ELECTIONS

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Article 113: Conduct of elections

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(1) There shall be an Election Commission, to be constituted in accordance with Article 114, which, subject to the provisions of federal law, shall conduct elections of the President and the Vice-President, of the Governors of States not having a Ruler, to both Houses of Parliament and the Legislative Assemblies of the States, and prepare and revise electoral rolls for such elections.
(2) After the return of each population census, and whenever it considers it necessary under Clause (3), the Election Commission shall review the division of the Federation and the states into constituencies and recommend such changes therein as they may think necessary in order to comply with the provisions contained in the Thirteenth Schedule; and the reviews of constituencies for the purpose of elections to the Legislative Assemblies shall be undertaken at the same time as the reviews of constituencies for the purpose of elections to the House of Representatives.
(i) Subject to paragraph (ii), the Election Commission shall, from time to time, as they deem necessary, review the division of the Federation and the States into constituencies and recommend such changes therein as they may think necessary in order to comply with the provisions contained in the Thirteenth Schedule; and the reviews of constituencies for the purpose of elections to the Legislative Assemblies shall be undertaken at the same time as the reviews of constituencies for the purpose of elections to the House of Representatives.
(3) If the Election Commission are of opinion that in consequence of a law made under Article 2 it is necessary to undertake the reviews mentioned in Clause (2), they shall do so.
(4) Federal or State law may authorize the Election Commission to conduct elections other than those referred to in Clause (1).
(5) So far as may be necessary for the purposes of its functions under this Article the Election Commission may make rules, but any such rules shall have effect subject to the provisions of federal law.
(6) There shall be separate reviews under Clause (2) for the States of Malaya, for each of the Borneo States, for the State of Singapore and for the Philippine States, and for the purposes of this Part—
the expression “unit of review” shall mean, for federal constituencies, the area under review and, for State constituencies, the State;
the States of Malaya shall be deemed to include the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur;
the Philippine States shall be deemed to include the Federal Territory of Metropolitan Manila; and
the State of Sabah shall be deemed to include the Federal Territory of Labuan.
(7) Subject to Clause (3), the period for the first reviews under Clause (2) for any unit of review shall be calculated from the first delimitation of constituencies for that unit under this Constitution or under the Malaysia Act.

Article 114: Constitution of Election Commission

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(1) The Election Commission shall be appointed by the President with the Consent of the Commission on Appointments, and shall consist of a chairman, a deputy chairman and three other members.
(2) In appointing members of the Election Commission the President shall have regard to the importance of securing an Election Commission which enjoys public confidence.
(3) A member of the Election Commission shall cease to hold office on attaining the age of sixty-six years or on becoming disqualified under Clause (4) and may at any time resign his office by writing under his hand addressed to the President, but shall not be removed from office except on the like grounds and in the like manner as a judge of the Supreme Court.
(4) Notwithstanding anything in Clause (3), the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall by order remove from office any member of the Election Commission if such member—
(a) is an undischarged bankrupt; or
(b) engages in any paid office or employment outside the duties of his office;
(c) is the President, the Vice-President, or the Ruler or Governor of a State; or
(d) is a member of the Cabinet or of the Executive Council of a State; or
(e) or a member of either House of Parliament or of the Legislative Assembly of a State.
(5) Parliament shall by law provide for the remuneration of members of the Election Commission, and the remuneration so provided shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.
(5A) Subject to the provisions of this Article, Parliament may by law provide for the terms of office of members of the Election Commission other than their remuneration.
(6) The remuneration and other terms of office of a member of the Election Commission shall not be altered to his disadvantage after his appointment.
(7) Where, during any period, the chairman of the Election Commission has been granted leave of absence by the President or is unable, owing to his absence from the Federation, illness or any other cause, to discharge his functions, the deputy chairman shall discharge the functions of the chairman during that period, and if the deputy chairman is also absent or unable to discharge such functions, a member of the Election Commission may be appointed by the President to discharge the functions of the chairman during that period.

Article 115: Assistance to Election Commission

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115. (1) The Election Commission may employ such number of persons, on such terms and subject to such conditions, as the Commission may with the approval of the President determine.

(2) All public authorities shall on the request of the Commission give the Commission such assistance in the discharge of its duties as may be practicable; and in exercising its functions of making recommendations for the delimitation of constituencies for the elections mentioned in Clause (1) of Article 113 the Commission shall seek the advice of two officers of the Federal Government with special knowledge of the topography of, and the distribution of the population in, the unit of review for federal elections, and those officers shall be selected for that purpose by the President.

Article 116: Federal constituencies

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116. (1) For the election of members to the House of Representatives a unit of review shall be divided into electoral districts in accordance with the provisions contained in the Thirteenth Schedule.

(2) The total number of electoral districts shall be equal to the number of members, and of that total in the States of Malaya and in the Philippine States a number determined in accordance with the provisions contained in the Thirteenth Schedule shall be allocated to each State.
(3) For the election of members to the House of Representatives a unit of review shall be divided into constituencies–
(a) by establishing a given electoral district as a single-member constituency; or
(a) by establishing a group representation constituency comprising not less than three but not more than six adjacent electoral districts.
(4) No constituency shall form part of more than one State, and no constituency established in a Philippine State shall form part of more than one Province.
(5) There shall be elected for each constituency as many members as there are electoral districts comprised in that constituency.

Article 117: State constituencies

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(1) For the election of members to the Legislative Assembly of a State the State shall be divided into as many electoral districts as there are elected members, and the division shall be made in accordance with the provisions contained in the Thirteenth Schedule.
(2) For the election of members to the Legislative Assembly of a State the State shall be divided into constituencies–
(a) by establishing a given electoral district as a single-member constituency; or
(a) by establishing a group representation constituency comprising not less than three but not more than six adjacent electoral districts.
(3) No constituency established in a Philippine State shall form part of more than one Province.
(4) There shall be elected for each constituency as many members as there are electoral districts comprised in that constituency.

Article 117A: Election of Members from single-member constituencies

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For the election of members to the House of Representatives or to the Legislative Assembly of a State from a single-member constituency–
(a) each elector shall have one vote; and
(b) the candidate who receives the greatest number of votes shall be elected.

Article 117B: Election of Members from group representation constituencies

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(1) For the election of members to the House of Representatives or to the Legislative Assembly of a State from a group representation constituency–
(a) each elector shall have one vote, which shall be cast for a group as a whole;
(b) the group which receives the greatest group representation quota shall be assigned one seat;
(c) every time a seat is assigned under paragraph (b), the group representation quotas shall be recalculated, and the said paragraph (b) re-applied, until all seats for the constituency are assigned; and
(d) the candidates in each group who are ranked highest in the nomination order shall be elected to fill the seats assigned to that group.
(2) All the candidates in every group shall be either members of the same political party standing for election for that political party together or independent candidates standing for election together, and shall be ranked by an order of precedence.
(3) In this Article–
“group” means a group of not less than three candidates nominated for any election in any group representation constituency; and
“group representation quota” means the number of votes given for a group, divided by the number of seats assigned to it under clause (2) plus one.

Article 118: Method of challenging election

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118. No election to the House of Representatives or to the Legislative Assembly of a State shall be called in question except by an election petition presented to the High Court having jurisdiction where the election was held.

Article 118A: Method of questioning election petition of no return

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118A. A petition complaining of no return to the House of Representatives or the Legislative Assembly shall be deemed to be an election petition and the High Court may make such order thereon as it may think fit for compelling a return to be made, but the failure to make a return within any period specified by Article 54 or 55 or by the corresponding provision of the Constitution of any State, as the case may be, shall not be a ground for declaring that a member has not been duly elected.

Article 119: Qualifications of electors

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119. (1) Every citizen who—

(a) has attained the age of twenty-one years on the qualifying date;
(b) is resident in a constituency on such qualifying date or, if not so resident, is an absent voter; and
(c) is, under the provisions of any law relating to elections, registered in the electoral roll as an elector in the constituency in which he resides on the qualifying date,
is entitled to vote in that constituency in any election to the House of Representatives or the Legislative Assembly unless he is disqualified under Clause (3) or under any law relating to offences committed in connection with elections; but no person shall in the same election vote in more than one constituency.
(2) If a person is in a constituency by reason only of being a patient in an establishment maintained wholly or mainly for the reception and treatment of persons suffering from mental illness or mental defectiveness or of being detained in custody he shall for the purposes of Clause (1) be deemed not to be resident in that constituency.
(3) A person is disqualified for being an elector in any election to the House of Representatives or the Legislative Assembly if—
(a) on the qualifying date he is detained as a person of unsound mind or is serving a sentence of imprisonment; or
(b) having before the qualifying date been convicted in any part of the Commonwealth of an offence and sentenced to death or imprisonment for a term exceeding twelve months, he remains liable on the qualifying date to suffer any punishment for that offence.
(4) In this Article—
(a) “absent voter” means, in relation to any constituency, any citizen who is registered as an absent voter in respect of that constituency;
(b) “qualifying date” means the date on which a person applies for registration as an elector in a constituency, or the date on which he applies for the change of his registration as an elector in a different constituency,
in accordance with the provisions of any law relating to elections.

Article 120: Direct elections to the Senate

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120. Where in accordance with Clause (4) of Article 45 provision is made by Parliament for the election of Senators by the direct vote of electors—

(a) the whole of a State shall form a single constituency and each elector shall have as many votes at any election to the Senate as there are seats to be filled in that election; and
(b) the electoral rolls for elections to the House of Representatives shall also be the electoral rolls for elections to the Senate; and
(c) Articles 118, 118A and 119 shall apply in relation to elections to the Senate as they apply in relation to elections to the House of Representatives.

PART IX
THE JUDICIARY

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Article 121: Judicial power of the Federation

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121. (1) There shall be two High Courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction and status, namely—

(a) one in the States of Malaya, which shall be known as the High Court in Malaya and shall have its principal registry at such place in the States of Malaya as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may determine; and
(b) one in the States of Sabah and Sarawak, which shall be known as the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak and shall have its principal registry at such place in the States of Sabah and Sarawak as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may determine;
(c) (Repealed),
and such inferior courts as may be provided by federal law; and the High Courts and inferior courts shall have such jurisdiction and powers as may be conferred by or under federal law.
(1A) The courts referred to in Clause (1) shall have no jurisdiction in respect of any matter within the jurisdiction of the Syariah courts.
(1B) There shall be a court which shall be known as the Mahkamah Rayuan (Court of Appeal) and shall have its principal registry at such place as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may determine, and the Court of Appeal shall have the following jurisdiction, that is to say—
(a) jurisdiction to determine appeals from decisions of a High Court or a judge thereof (except decisions of a High Court given by a registrar or other officer of the Court and appealable under federal law to a judge of the Court); and
(b) such other jurisdiction as may be conferred by or under federal law.
(2) There shall be a court which shall be known as the Mahkamah Persekutuan (Federal Court) and shall have its principal registry at such place as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may determine, and the Federal Court shall have the following jurisdiction, that is to say—
(a) jurisdiction to determine appeals from decisions of the Court of Appeal, of the High Court or a judge thereof;
(b) such original or consultative jurisdiction as is specified in Articles 128 and 130; and
(c) such other jurisdiction as may be conferred by or under federal law.
(3) Subject to any limitations imposed by or under federal law, any order, decree, judgment or process of the courts referred to in Clause (1) or of any judge thereof shall (so far as its nature permits) have full force and effect according to its tenor throughout the Federation, and may be executed or enforced in any part of the Federation accordingly; and federal law may provide for courts in one part of the Federation or their officers to act in aid of courts in another part.
(4) In determining where the principal registry of the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak is to be, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall act on the advice of the Prime Minister, who shall consult the Chief Ministers of the States of Sabah and Sarawak and the Chief Judge of the High Court.

Article 122: Constitution of Federal Court

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122. (1) The Federal Court shall consist of a president of the Court (to be styled “the Chief Justice of the Federal Court”), of the President of the Court of Appeal, of the Chief Judges of the High Courts and, until the Yang di-Pertuan Agong by order otherwise provides, of four* other judges and such additional judges as may be appointed pursuant to Clause (1A).

(1A) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution contained, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong acting on the advice of the Chief Justice of the Federal Court may appoint for such purposes or for such period of time as he may specify any person who has held high judicial office in Malaysia to be an additional judge of the Federal Court:
Provided that no such additional judge shall be ineligible to hold office by reason of having attained the age of sixty-six years.
(2) A judge of the Court of Appeal other than the President of the Court of Appeal may sit as a judge of the Federal Court where the Chief Justice considers that the interests of justice so require, and the judge shall be nominated for the purpose (as occasion requires) by the Chief Justice.

* Now “shall not exceed eleven”–see P.U. (A) 163/2009.

Article 122A: Constitution of Court of Appeal

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122A. (1) The Court of Appeal shall consist of a chairman (to be styled the “President of the Court of Appeal”) and, until the Yang di-Pertuan Agong by order otherwise provides, of ten** other judges.

(2) A judge of a High Court may sit as a judge of the Court of Appeal where the President of the Court of Appeal considers that the interests of justice so require, and the judge shall be nominated for the purpose (as occasion requires) by the President of the Court of Appeal after consulting the Chief Judge of that High Court.

** Now “shall not exceed thirty-two”—see P.U. (A) 164/2009.

Article 122AA: Constitution of the High Courts

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122AA. (1) Each of the High Courts shall consist of a Chief Judge and not less than four other judges; but the number of other judges shall not, until the Yang di-Pertuan Agong by order otherwise provides, exceed—

(a) in the High Court in Malaya, forty-seven*; and
(b) in the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak, ten**.
(2) Any person qualified for appointment as a judge of a High Court may sit as a judge of that Court if designated for the purpose (as occasion requires) in accordance with Article 122B.

* Now “shall not exceed sixty”—see P.U. (A) 384/2006.

** Now “shall not exceed thirteen”—see P.U. (A) 385/2006.

Article 122AB: Appointment of judicial commissioner

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122AB. (1) For the despatch of business of the High Court in Malaya and the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong acting on the advice of the Prime Minister, after consulting the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, may by order appoint to be judicial commissioner for such period or such purposes as may be specified in the order any person qualified for appointment as a judge of a High Court; and the person so appointed shall have power to perform such functions of a judge of the High Court as appear to him to require to be performed; and anything done by him when acting in accordance with his appointment shall have the same validity and effect as if done by a judge of that Court, and in respect thereof he shall have the same powers and enjoy the same immunities as if he had been a judge of that Court.

(2) The provisions of Clauses (2) and (5) of Article 124 shall apply to a judicial commissioner as they apply to a judge of a High Court.

Article 122B: Appointment of judges of Federal Court, Court of Appeal and High Courts

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122B. (1) The Chief Justice of the Federal Court, the President of the Court of Appeal and the Chief Judges of the High Courts and (subject to Article 122C) the other judges of the Federal Court, of the Court of Appeal and of the High Courts shall be appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, acting on the advice of the Prime Minister, after consulting the Conference of Rulers.

(2) Before tendering his advice as to the appointment under Clause (1) of a judge other than the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, the Prime Minister shall consult the Chief Justice.
(3) Before tendering his advice as to the appointment under Clause (1) of the Chief Judge of a High Court, the Prime Minister shall consult the Chief Judge of each of the High Courts and, if the appointment is to the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak, the Chief Minister of each of the States of Sabah and Sarawak.
(4) Before tendering his advice as to the appointment under Clause (1) of a judge other than the Chief Justice, President or a Chief Judge, the Prime Minister shall consult, if the appointment is to the Federal Court, the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, if the appointment is to the Court of Appeal, the President of the Court of Appeal and, if the appointment is to one of the High Courts, the Chief Judge of that Court.
(5) This Article shall apply to the designation of a person to sit as judge of a High Court under Clause (2) of Article 122AA as it applies to the appointment of a judge of that court other than the Chief Judge.
(6) Notwithstanding the dates of their respective appointments as judges of the Federal Court, of the Court of Appeal or of the High Courts, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, acting on the advice of the Prime Minister given after consulting the Chief Justice, may determine the order of precedence of the judges among themselves.

Article 122C: Transfer of judge of one High Court to another

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122C. Article 122B shall not apply to the transfer to a High Court, otherwise than as Chief Judge, of a judge of another High Court other than the Chief Judge; and such a transfer may be made by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, on the recommendation of the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, after consulting the Chief Judges of the two High Courts.

Article 123: Qualifications of judges of Federal Court, Court of Appeal and High Courts

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123. A person is qualified for appointment under Article 122B as a judge of the Federal Court, as a judge of the Court of Appeal or as a judge of any of the High Courts if—

(a) he is a citizen; and
(b) for the ten years preceding his appointment he has been an advocate of those courts or any of them or a member of the judicial and legal service of the Federation or of the legal service of a State, or sometimes one and sometimes another.

Article 124: Oath of office of judges

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124. (1) The Chief Justice of the Federal Court shall before exercising the functions of his office take and subscribe the oath of office and allegiance set out in the Sixth Schedule, and shall do so in the presence of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

(2) A judge of the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal or a High Court, other than the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, shall before exercising the functions of a judge take and subscribe the oath of office and allegiance set out in the Sixth Schedule in relation to his judicial duties in whatever office.
(2A) A person taking the oath on becoming the President of the Court of Appeal shall do so in the presence of the senior judge available of the Court of Appeal.
(3) A person taking the oath on becoming Chief Judge of a High Court shall do so in the presence of the senior judge available of that High Court.
(4) A person taking the oath on becoming a judge of the Federal Court shall do so in the presence of the Chief Justice or, in his absence, the next senior judge available of the Federal Court.
(4A) A person taking the oath on becoming a judge of the Court of Appeal shall do so in the presence of the President of the Court of Appeal or, in his absence, the next senior judge available of the Court of Appeal.
(5) A person taking the oath on becoming a judge of a High Court (but not Chief Judge) shall do so in the presence of the Chief Judge of that Court or, in his absence, the next senior judge available of that Court.

Article 125: Tenure of office and remuneration of judges of Federal Court

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125. (1) Subject to the provisions of Clauses (2) to (5), a judge of the Federal Court shall hold office until he attains the age of sixty-six years or such later time, not being later than six months after he attains that age, as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may approve.

(2) A judge of the Federal Court may at any time resign his office by writing under his hand addressed to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong but shall not be removed from office except in accordance with the following provisions of this Article.
(3) If the Prime Minister, or the Chief Justice after consulting the Prime Minister, represents to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong that a judge of the Federal Court ought to be removed on the ground of any breach of any provision of the code of ethics prescribed under Clause (3B) or on the ground of inability, from infirmity of body or mind or any other cause, properly to discharge the functions of his office, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall appoint a tribunal in accordance with Clause (4) and refer the representation to it; and may on the recommendation of the tribunal remove the judge from office.
(3A) Where a judge has committed a breach of any provisions of the code of ethics prescribed under Clause (3B) but the Chief Justice is of the opinion that the breach does not warrant the judge being referred to a tribunal appointed under Clause (4), the Chief Justice may refer the judge to a body constituted under federal law to deal with such breach.
(3B) The Yang di-Pertuan Agong on the recommendation of the Chief Justice, the President of the Court of Appeal and the Chief Judges of the High Courts may, after consulting the Prime Minister, prescribe in writing a code of ethics which shall also include provisions on the procedure to be followed and sanctions which can be imposed other than the removal of a judge from office under Clause (3), in relation to a breach of any provision of the code of ethics.
(3C) The code of ethics prescribed under Clause (3B) shall be observed by every judge of the Federal Court and every judicial commissioner.
(4) The tribunal appointed under Clause (3) shall consist of not less than five persons who hold or have held office as judge of the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal or a High Court, or, if it appears to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong expedient to make such appointment, persons who hold or have held equivalent office in any other part of the Commonwealth, and shall be presided over by the member first in the following order, namely, the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, the President and the Chief Judges according to their precedence among themselves, and other members according to the order of their appointment to an office qualifying them for membership (the older coming before the younger of two members with appointments of the same date).
(5) Pending any reference and report under Clause (3) the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may on the recommendation of the Prime Minister and, in the case of any other judge after consulting the Chief Justice, suspend a judge of the Federal Court from the exercise of his functions.
(6) Parliament shall by law provide for the remuneration of the judges of the Federal Court, and the remuneration so provided shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.
(6A) Subject to the provisions of this Article, Parliament may by law provide for the terms of office of the judges of the Federal Court other than their remuneration.
(7) The remuneration and other terms of office (including pension rights) of a judge of the Federal Court shall not be altered to his disadvantage after his appointment.
(8) Notwithstanding Clause (1), the validity of anything done by a judge of the Federal Court shall not be questioned on the ground that he had attained the age at which he was required to retire.
(9) This Article shall apply to a judge of the Court of Appeal and to a judge of a High Court as it applies to a judge of the Federal Court, except that the Yang di-Pertuan Agong before suspending under Clause (5) a judge of the Court of Appeal or a judge of a High Court other than the President of the Court of Appeal or the Chief Judge of a High Court shall consult the President of the Court of Appeal or the Chief Judge of that High Court instead of the Chief Justice of the Federal Court.
(10) The President of the Court of Appeal and the Chief Judges of the High Courts shall be responsible to the Chief Justice of the Federal Court.

Article 125A: Exercise of powers by judges

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125A. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Constitution, it is hereby declared that—

(a) the Chief Justice of the Federal Court and a judge of the Federal Court may exercise all or any of the powers of a judge of the Court of Appeal and of a judge of a High Court;
(aa) the President of the Court of Appeal and a judge of the Court of Appeal may exercise all or any of the powers of a judge of a High Court; and
(b) a judge of the High Court in Malaya may exercise all or any of the powers of a judge of the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak, and vice versa.
(2) The provisions of this Article shall be deemed to have been an integral part of this Constitution as from Malaysia Day.

Article 126: Power to punish for contempt

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126. The Federal Court, the Court of Appeal or a High Court shall have power to punish any contempt of itself.

Article 127: Restriction on Parliamentary discussion of conduct of judge

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127. The conduct of a judge of the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal or a High Court shall not be discussed in either House of Parliament except on a substantive motion of which notice has been given by not less than one quarter of the total number of members of that House, and shall not be discussed in the Legislative Assembly of any State.

Article 128: Jurisdiction of Federal Court

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128. (1) The Federal Court shall, to the exclusion of any other court, have jurisdiction to determine in accordance with any rules of court regulating the exercise of such jurisdiction—

(a) any question whether a law made by Parliament or by the Legislature of a State is invalid on the ground that it makes provision with respect to a matter with respect to which Parliament or, as the case may be, the Legislature of the State has no power to make laws; and
(b) disputes on any other question between States or between the Federation and any State.
(2) Without prejudice to any appellate jurisdiction of the Federal Court, where in any proceedings before another court a question arises as to the effect of any provision of this Constitution, the Federal Court shall have jurisdiction (subject to any rules of court regulating the exercise of that jurisdiction) to determine the question and remit the case to the other court to be disposed of in accordance with the determination.
(3) The jurisdiction of the Federal Court to determine appeals from the Court of Appeal, a High Court or a judge thereof shall be such as may be provided by federal law.

Article 129: (Special jurisdiction of Supreme Court as to the interpretation of constitution—Repealed)

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129. (Repealed).

Article 130: Advisory jurisdiction of Federal Court

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130. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong may refer to the Federal Court for its opinion any question as to the effect of any provision of this Constitution which has arisen or appears to him likely to arise, and the Federal Court shall pronounce in open court its opinion on any question so referred to it.

Article 131: (Appeals from Federal Court—Repealed)

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131. (Repealed).

Article 131A: Provision for incapacity, etc., of Chief Justice, President or Chief Judge

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131A. (1) Any provision made by federal law for the functions of the Chief Justice of the Federal Court or the President of the Court of Appeal or the Chief Judge of a High Court to be performed, in the event of a vacancy in the office or of his inability to act, by a judge of the Federal Court may extend to his functions under this Constitution.

(2) Any provision made by federal law for the functions of the President of the Court of Appeal or the Chief Judge of a High Court to be performed, in the event of a vacancy in the office or of his inability to act, by another judge of the Court of Appeal or the High Court, as the case may be, may extend to his functions under this Constitution other than functions as judge of the Federal Court.

PART X
PUBLIC SERVICES

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Article 132: Public services

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132. (1) For the purposes of this Constitution, the public services are—

(a) the armed forces;
(b) the judicial and legal service;
(c) the general public service of the Federation;
(d) the police force;
(e) (Repealed);
(f) the joint public services mentioned in Article 133;
(g) the public service of each State; and
(h) the education service.
(2) Except as otherwise expressly provided by this Constitution, the qualifications for appointment and conditions of service of persons in the public services other than those mentioned in paragraph (g) of Clause (1) may be regulated by federal law and, subject to the provisions of any such law, by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong; and the qualifications for appointment and conditions of service of persons in the public service of any State may be regulated by State law and, subject to the provisions of any such law, by the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri of that State.
(2A) Except as expressly provided by this Constitution, every person who is a member of any of the services mentioned in paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d), (f) and (h) of Clause (1) holds office during the pleasure of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, and, except as expressly provided by the Constitution of the State, every person who is a member of the public service of a State holds office during the pleasure of the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri.
(3) The public service shall not be taken to comprise—
(a) the office of any member of the administration in the Federation or a State; or
(b) the office of President, Speaker, Deputy President, Deputy Speaker or member of either House of Parliament or of the Legislative Assembly of a State; or
(c) the office of judge of the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal or a High Court; or
(d) the office of member of any Commission or Council established by this Constitution or any corresponding Commission or Council established by the Constitution of a State; or
(e) such diplomatic posts as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may by order prescribe, being posts which but for the order would be posts in the general public service of the Federation.
(4) References in this Part, except in Articles 136 and 147, to persons in the public service or to members of any of the public services shall not apply to—
(a) (Repealed);
(b) the Attorney General or, if provision for the manner of his appointment and removal from office is specifically included in the Constitution of the State, or if he is appointed otherwise than from among the members of the judicial and legal service or of the public service of the State, the legal adviser of any State; or
(c) a member of the personal staff of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or of a Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri; or
(d) in the case of Malacca and Penang, if provision is made by State law for their appointment—
(i) the President of the Religious Affairs Department;
(ii) the Secretary of the Religious Affairs Department;
(iii) the Mufti;
(iv) the Kadi Besar; or
(v) a Kadi.

Article 133: Joint services, etc.

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133. (1) Joint services, common to the Federation and one or more of the States or, at the request of the States concerned, to two or more States, may be established by federal law.

(2) Where a member of any of the public services is employed—
(a) partly for federal purposes and partly for State purposes; or
(b) for the purposes of two or more States,
the proportion, if any, of his remuneration payable by the Federation and the State or States concerned or, as the case may be, by each of the States concerned, shall, subject to federal law, be determined by agreement or, in default of agreement, by the Commission whose jurisdiction extends to him.

Article 134: Secondment of officers

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134. (1) The Federation may, at the request of a State, local authority, or statutory authority, or of any organization, in or outside Malaysia, second any member of its public services to the service of that State, authority or organization, as the case may be; and a State may, at the request of the Federation, another State, a local authority, or a statutory authority or of any organization, in or outside Malaysia, second any member of its own public service to the service of the Federation, other State, authority or organization, as the case may be.

(2) A person seconded under this Article shall remain a member of the service to which he belongs, but his remuneration shall be paid by the Federation, State, authority or organization, as the case may be, to whose service he is seconded.

Article 135: Restriction on dismissal and reduction in rank

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135. (1) No member of any of the services mentioned in paragraphs (b) to (h) of Clause (1) of Article 132 shall be dismissed or reduced in rank by an authority subordinate to that which, at the time of the dismissal or reduction, has power to appoint a member of that service of equal rank:

Provided that in its application to members of the services mentioned in paragraph (g) of Clause (1) of Article 132 this Clause shall not apply to any law which the legislature of any State, other than Penang and Malacca, may make to provide that all powers and functions of a Public Service Commission of such State, other than the power of first appointment to the permanent or pensionable establishment, be exercised by a Board appointed by the Ruler of such State:
And provided further that this Clause shall not apply to a case where a member of any of the services mentioned in this Clause is dismissed or reduced in rank by an authority in pursuance of a power delegated to it by a Commission to which this Part applies, and this proviso shall be deemed to have been an integral part of this Clause as from Merdeka Day.
(2) No member of such a service as aforesaid shall be dismissed or reduced in rank without being given a reasonable opportunity of being heard:
Provided that this Clause shall not apply to the following cases:
(a) where a member of such a service is dismissed or reduced in rank on the ground of conduct in respect of which a criminal charge has been proved against him; or
(b) where the authority empowered to dismiss or reduce in rank a member of such a service is satisfied that for some reason, to be recorded by that authority in writing, it is not reasonably practicable to carry out the requirements of this Clause; or
(c) where the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, or, in the case of a member of the public service of a State, the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri of that State, is satisfied that in the interests of the security of the Federation or any part thereof it is not expedient to carry out the requirements of this Clause; or
(d) where there has been made against a member of such a service any order of detention, supervision, restricted residence, banishment or deportation, or where there has been imposed on such a member any form of restriction or supervision by bond or otherwise, under any law relating to the security of the Federation or any part thereof, prevention of crime, preventive detention, restricted residence, banishment, immigration, or protection of women and girls:
Provided further that for the purpose of this Article, where the service of a member of such a service is terminated in the public interest under any law for the time being in force or under any regulation made by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong under Clause (2) of Article 132, such termination of service shall not constitute dismissal whether or not the decision to terminate the service is connected with the misconduct of or unsatisfactory performance of duty by such member in relation to his office or the consequences of the termination involved an element of punishment; and this proviso shall be deemed to have been an integral part of this Article as from Merdeka Day.
(3) No member of any of the services mentioned in paragraph (c), (f) or (g) of Clause (1) of Article 132 shall, without the concurrence of the Judicial and Legal Service Commission, be dismissed or reduced in rank or suffer any other disciplinary measure for anything done or omitted by him in the exercise of a judicial function conferred on him by law.

Article 136: Impartial treatment of federal employees

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136. All persons of whatever race in the same grade in the service of the Federation shall, subject to the terms and conditions of their employment, be treated impartially.

Article 137: Armed Forces Council

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137. (1) There shall be an Armed Forces Council, which shall be responsible under the general authority of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong for the command, discipline and administration of, and all other matters relating to, the armed forces, other than matters relating to their operational use.

(2) Clause (1) has effect subject to the provisions of any federal law, and any such law may provide for the vesting in the Armed Forces Council of any functions with respect to the armed forces.
(3) The Armed Forces Council shall consist of the following members, that is to say:
(a) the Minister for the time being charged with responsibility for defence, who shall be Chairman;
(b) one member representing Their Royal Highnesses, who shall be appointed by the Conference of Rulers;
(c) the Chief of Defence Forces who shall be appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong;
(d) a civilian member, being the person performing the duties of the office of Secretary General for Defence, who shall act as Secretary to the Council;
(e) two senior staff officers of the Federation Armed Forces, appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong;
(f) a senior officer of the Federation Navy, appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong;
(g) a senior officer of the Federation Air Force, appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong;
(h) two, if any, additional members, whether military or civilian, appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.
(4) The Armed Forces Council may act notwithstanding a vacancy in its membership and may, subject to this Constitution and to federal law, provide for all or any of the following matters:
(a) the organization of its work and the manner in which its functions are to be performed, and the keeping of records and minutes;
(b) the duties and responsibilities of the several members of the Council, including the delegation to any member of the Council of any of its powers or duties;
(c) the consultation by the Council with persons other than its members;
(d) the procedure to be followed by the Council in conducting its business (including the fixing of a quorum), the appointment, at its option, of a vice-chairman from among its members, and the functions of the vice-chairman;
(e) any other matters for which the Council considers it necessary or expedient to provide for the better performance of its functions.

Article 138: Judicial and Legal Service Commission

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138. (1) There shall be a Judicial and Legal Service Commission, whose jurisdiction shall extend to all members of the judicial and legal service.

(2) The Judicial and Legal Service Commission shall consist of—
(a) the Chairman of the Public Services Commission, who shall be Chairman;
(b) the Attorney General or, if the Attorney General is a member of Parliament or is appointed otherwise than from among members of the Judicial and Legal Service, the Solicitor General; and
(c) one or more other members who shall be appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, after consultation with the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, from among persons who are or have been or are qualified to be a judge of the Federal Court, Court of Appeal or a High Court or shall before Malaysia Day have been a judge of the Supreme Court.
(3) The person who is secretary to the Public Services Commission shall be secretary also to the Judicial and Legal Service Commission.

Article 139: Public Services Commission

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139. (1) There shall be a Public Services Commission, whose jurisdiction shall, subject to Article 144, extend to all persons who are members of the services mentioned in paragraphs (c) and (f) of Clause (1) of Article 132, other than the Auditor General, to members of the public services of the State of Malacca and the State of Penang, and, to the extent provided by Clause (2), to members of the public service of any other State.

(1A) The jurisdiction of the Public Services Commission shall extend to—
(a) members of the general public service of the Federation who are employed in a federal department in the State of Sabah or Sarawak;
(b) members of the public service of the State of Sabah or Sarawak who are seconded to the general public service of the Federation; and
(c) members of the public service of the State of Sabah or Sarawak serving in federal posts or in any posts which have become federal posts in that State and who have exercised the option to be members of the general public service of the Federation.
(2) The Legislature of any State other than Malacca and Penang may by law extend the jurisdiction of the Public Services Commission to all or any persons in the public service of that State, but no such law shall take effect earlier than twelve months from the date of its passing; and if at any time there is not, in any such State in which no such law is in force, established and exercising its functions a State Public Service Commission, the jurisdiction of the Public Services Commission shall, if federal law so provides, extend to all members of the public service of that State.
(3) Any extension of the jurisdiction of the Public Service Commission made by the Legislature of any State pursuant to Clause (2) may be revoked or modified by a law passed by the legislature of such State.
(4) The Public Services Commission shall consist of the following members appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong in his discretion but after considering the advice of the Prime Minister and after consultation with the Conference of Rulers, that is to say, a chairman, a deputy chairman and not less than four other members; but the number of the other members shall not, until the Yang di-Pertuan Agong by order otherwise provides, exceed thirty.
(5) Either the chairman or the deputy chairman shall be, and both may be, appointed from among persons who are, or have at any time within the period of five years immediately preceding the date of their first appointment been, members of any of the public services.
(6) A member of any of the public services appointed to be chairman or deputy chairman shall not be eligible for any further appointment in the service of the Federation other than as a member of a Commission to which this Part applies.

Article 140: Police Force Commission

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140. (1) There shall be a Police Force Commission whose jurisdiction shall extend to all persons who are members of the police force and which, subject to the provisions of any existing law, shall be responsible for the appointment, confirmation, emplacement on the permanent or pensionable establishment, promotion, transfer and exercise of disciplinary control over members of the police force:

Provided that Parliament may by law provide for the exercise of such disciplinary control over all or any of the members of the police force in such manner and by such authority as may be provided in that law, and in that event, if the authority is other than the Commission, the disciplinary control exercisable by such authority shall not be exercised by the Commission; and no provision of such law shall be invalid on the ground of inconsistency with any provision of this Part.
(2) Federal law may provide for the exercise of other functions by the Police Force Commission.
(3) The Police Force Commission shall consist of the following members, that is to say:
(a) the Minister for the time being charged with responsibility for the police, who shall be Chairman;
(b) the officer of police in general command of the police force;
(c) the person performing the duties of the office of Secretary General to the Ministry under the Minister for the time being charged with responsibility for the police;
(d) a member of the Public Services Commission appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong;
(e) not less than two nor more than six other members, appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.
(4) The Yang di-Pertuan Agong may designate as special posts the posts of Inspector General of Police, Deputy Inspector General of Police and any other posts in the police force which in his opinion are of similar or superior status; and the appointment to any post so designated shall not be made in accordance with Clause (1) but shall be made by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong on the recommendation of the Police Force Commission.
(5) Before acting in accordance with Clause (4) on the recommendation of the Police Force Commission, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall consider the advice of the Prime Minister, and may once refer the recommendation back to the Commission in order that it may be reconsidered.
(6) The Police Force Commission may provide for all or any of the following matters:
(a) the organization of its work and the manner in which its functions are to be performed, and the keeping of records and minutes;
(b) the duties and responsibilities of the several members of the Commission, including the delegation to any member of the Commission or the police force or board of officers of such force or a committee consisting of members of the Commission and of the force of its powers or duties;
(c) the consultation by the Commission with persons other than its members;
(d) the procedure to be followed by the Commission in conducting its business (including the fixing of a quorum), the appointment, at its option, of a vice-chairman from among its members, and the functions of the vice-chairman;
(e) any other matters for which the Commission considers it necessary or expedient to provide for the better performance of its functions.
(7) In this Article “transfer” does not include transfer without change of rank within the police force.

Article 141: (Railway Service Commission—Repealed)

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141. (Repealed).

Article 141A: Education Service Commission

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141A. (1) There shall be an Education Service Commission, whose jurisdiction shall, subject to Article 144, extend to all persons who are members of the service mentioned in paragraph (h) of Clause (1) of Article 132.

(2) The Education Service Commission shall consist of the following members appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong in his discretion but after considering the advice of the Prime Minister and after consultation with the Conference of Rulers, that is to say, a Chairman, a Deputy Chairman and not less than four other members; but the number of the other members shall not, until the Yang di-Pertuan Agong by order otherwise provides, exceed eight*.
(3) A member of any of the public services appointed to be Chairman or Deputy Chairman shall not be eligible for any further appointment in the service of the Federation other than as a member of a Commission to which this Part applies.

* Subsequently “twelve”—see P.U. (A) 150/1990. Now “sixteen”—see P.U. (A) 169/2001.

Article 142: General provisions relating to Commissions

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142. (1) Subject to paragraph (a) of Clause (3) of Article 140, a member of either House of Parliament or of the Legislative Assembly of a State shall not be or be appointed to be a member of a Commission to which this Part applies.

(2) Subject to Clause (3), a person shall not be appointed to be a member of any of the Commissions to which this Part applies if he is, and shall be removed by order of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong if he becomes—
(a) a member of any of the public services;
(b) an officer or employee of any local authority, or of any body, whether corporate or otherwise, or of any body or authority established by law for public purposes;
(c) a member of a trade union or of a body or association affiliated to a trade union.
(2A) In addition to any disqualification provided under Clause (2), the Chairman or Deputy Chairman of any of the Commissions to which this Part applies shall be disqualified from holding such office if after three months of his appointment to such office or at any time thereafter he is or becomes a member of any board of directors or board of management, or an officer or employee, or engages in the affairs or business, of any organization or body, whether corporate or otherwise, or of any commercial, industrial or other undertaking, whether or not he receives any remuneration, reward, profit or benefit from it:
Provided that such disqualification shall not apply where such organization or body carries out any welfare or voluntary work or objective beneficial to the community or any part thereof, or any other work or objective of a charitable or social nature, and the member does not receive any remuneration, reward, profit or benefit from it.
(3) Clause (2) does not apply to ex officio members; and a member of any of the public services may be appointed to be and remain Chairman or Deputy Chairman and, if he is on leave prior to retirement, he may be appointed to be another member, of any of the said Commissions.
(3A) Where, during any period, the Chairman of any of the said Commissions has been granted leave of absence by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or is unable, owing to his absence from the Federation, illness or any other cause, to discharge his functions, the Deputy Chairman of that Commission shall discharge the functions of the Chairman during that period, and if the Deputy Chairman is also absent or unable to discharge such functions, a member of the Commission may be appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to discharge the functions of the Chairman during that period.
(4) Where, during any period, a member of any of the said Commissions has been granted leave of absence by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or is unable, owing to his absence from the Federation, illness or any other cause, to discharge his functions as a member, then—
(a) if he is an appointed member, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may appoint to exercise his functions during that period any person who would be qualified to be appointed in his place, and the appointment of such a person shall be made in the same manner as that of the member whose functions he is to exercise;
(b) if he is an ex officio member, any person authorized under federal law to perform the functions of his office may during that period perform also his functions as a member of the Commission.
(5) A Commission to which this Part applies may act notwithstanding a vacancy in its membership, and no proceedings of such a Commission shall be invalidated by reason only that some person not entitled thereto has taken part in them.
(6) Before exercising his functions as a member of any of the said Commissions or under Clause (4) any person other than an ex officio member shall take and subscribe before a judge of the Federal Court, of the Court of Appeal or of a High Court the oath of office and allegiance set out in the Sixth Schedule.

Article 143: Conditions of service of members of Commissions

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143. (1) Save as provided under Clause (2) of Article 142, a member of a Commission to which this Part applies, other than an ex officio member—

(a) shall be appointed for a term of five years or, if the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, acting in his discretion but after considering the advice of the Prime Minister, in a particular case so determines, for such shorter term as he may so determine;
(b) may, unless disqualified, be reappointed from time to time; and
(c) may at any time resign his office but shall not be removed from office except on the like grounds and in the like manner as a judge of the Federal Court.
(2) Parliament shall by law provide for the remuneration of any member of the said Commission other than a member for whose remuneration as holder of any other office provision is made by federal law; and the remuneration so provided shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund.
(3) The remuneration and other terms of office of a member of a Commission to which this Part applies shall not be altered to his disadvantage after his appointment.

Article 144: Functions of Service Commissions

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144. (1) Subject to the provisions of any existing law and to the provisions of this Constitution, it shall be the duty of a Commission to which this Part applies to appoint, confirm, emplace on the permanent or pensionable establishment, promote, transfer and exercise disciplinary control over members of the service or services to which its jurisdiction extends.

(2) Federal law may provide for the exercise of other functions by any such Commission.
(3) The Yang di-Pertuan Agong may designate as special posts any post held by the head or deputy head of a department or by an officer who in his opinion is of similar status; and the appointment to any post so designated shall not be made in accordance with Clause (1) but shall be made by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong on the recommendation of the Commission whose jurisdiction extends to the service in which the post is held.
(4) The Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri of a State may designate as special posts any posts in the public service of his State held by the head or deputy head of a department or by an officer who in his opinion is of similar status; and the appointment to any post so designated shall not be made in accordance with Clause (1) but shall be made by the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri on the recommendation of the Public Services Commission (or, if there is in the State a State Public Service Commission, on the recommendation of that Commission).
(5) Before acting, in accordance with Clause (3) or (4), on the recommendation of the Commission therein mentioned—
(a) the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall consider the advice of the Prime Minister; and
(b) the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri shall consider the advice of the Chief Minister of his State, and may once refer the recommendation back to the Commission in order that it may be reconsidered.
(5A) Save as provided in Clause (5B), federal law and, subject to the provisions of any such law, regulations made by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may, notwithstanding the provisions of Clause (1) of Article 135, provide for the exercise by any officer in a service to which the jurisdiction of a Commission to which this Part applies extends, or by any board of such officers, of any of the functions of the Commission under Clause (1):
Provided that—
(a) no such law or regulation may provide for the exercise by any such officer or board of officers of any power of first appointment to the permanent or pensionable establishment, or of any power of promotion (other than promotion to an acting appointment); and
(b) any person aggrieved by the exercise by any such officer or board of officers of any power of disciplinary control may appeal to the Commission within such time and in such manner as may be prescribed by any such law or regulations, and the Commission may make such order thereon as it may consider just.
(5B) (i) Notwithstanding the provisions of Clause (1) of Article 135 and Article 139 and Article 141A, all the powers and functions of the Public Services Commission or the Education Service Commission established under Article 139 and Article 141A, other than the power of first appointment to the permanent or pensionable establishment, may be exercised by a board appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.
(ii) Any person aggrieved by the exercise by the board of any of the aforesaid powers or functions may appeal to an Appeal Board appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.
(iii) The Yang di-Pertuan Agong may by regulations provide for matters relating to the appointments of the members of, and the procedure to be followed by, the board or the Appeal Board under this Clause.
(iv) Where the Yang di-Pertuan Agong has appointed the board under paragraph (i) of this Clause for the purpose of exercising any of the powers or functions referred to under that paragraph, such power or function shall so long as it remains a power or function to be exercised by the board, cease to be exercisable by the said Commission.
(6) A Commission to which this Part applies may delegate to any officer in a service to which its jurisdiction extends, or to any board of such officers appointed by it, any of its functions under Clause (1) in respect of any grade of service, and that officer or board shall exercise those functions under the direction and the control of the Commission.
(6A) In respect of members of the general public service of the Federation who are employed in posts ancillary to the armed forces or any of them or to the police force, or in respect of any grade of members of that service who are so employed, functions of the Public Services Commission may, under Clause (5A) or (6), be made exercisable by an officer or board of officers of the armed forces or police force, as the case may be, as if he or they were members of the general public service of the Federation.
(7) In this Article “transfer” does not include transfer without change of rank within a department of Government.
(8) A Commission to which this Part applies may, subject to the provisions of this Constitution and of federal law, make rules regulating its procedure and specifying the number of its members which are to constitute a quorum.

Article 145: Attorney General

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145. (1) The Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall, on the advice of the Prime Minister, appoint a person who is qualified to be a judge of the Federal Court to be the Attorney General for the Federation.

(2) It shall be the duty of the Attorney General to advise the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or the Cabinet or any Minister upon such legal matters, and to perform such other duties of a legal character, as may from time to time be referred or assigned to him by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or the Cabinet, and to discharge the functions conferred on him by or under this Constitution or any other written law.
(3) The Attorney General shall have power, exercisable at his discretion, to institute, conduct or discontinue any proceedings for an offence, other than proceedings before a Syariah court, a native court or a court-martial.
(3A) Federal law may confer on the Attorney General power to determine the courts in which or the venue at which any proceedings which he has power under Clause (3) to institute shall be instituted or to which such proceedings shall be transferred.
(4) In the performance of his duties the Attorney General shall have the right of audience in, and shall take precedence over any other person appearing before, any court or tribunal in the Federation.
(5) Subject to Clause (6), the Attorney General shall hold office during the pleasure of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong and may at any time resign his office and, unless he is a member of the Cabinet, shall receive such remuneration as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may determine.
(6) The person holding the office of Attorney General immediately prior to the coming into operation of this Article shall continue to hold the office on terms and conditions not less favourable than those applicable to him immediately before such coming into operation and shall not be removed from office except on the like grounds and in the like manner as a judge of the Federal Court.

Article 146: Reports of Commissions

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146. (1) Each of the Commissions to which this Part applies shall make an annual report on its activities to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong and copies of those reports shall be laid before both Houses of Parliament.

(2) The Public Services Commission shall send a copy of every report made under this Article to the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri of each State to members of whose public service their jurisdiction extends, and the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri shall lay it before the Legislative Assembly.

Article 146A: (Branch in Borneo States of Judicial and Legal Service Commission—Repealed)

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146A. (Repealed).

Article 146B: (Branches in each State of Sabah or Sarawak of Public Services Commission—Repealed)

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146B. (Repealed).

Article 146C: (Supplementary provisions as to branches of Public Services Commission—Repealed)

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146C. (Repealed).

Article 146D: Jurisdiction of Police Force Commission over seconded members of State service in States of Sabah and Sarawak

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146D. Notwithstanding Clause (2) of Article 134, the jurisdiction of the Police Force Commission shall extend to members of the public service of the State of Sabah or Sarawak who are seconded to the police force; and for purposes of the Police Force Commission they shall be deemed to be members of the police force.

(2) (Repealed).
(3) (Repealed).

Article 147: Protection of pension rights

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147. (1) The law applicable to any pension, gratuity or other like allowance (in this Article referred to as an “award”) granted to a member of any of the public services, or to his widow, children, dependant or personal representatives, shall be that in force on the relevant day or any later law not less favourable to the person to whom the award is made.

(2) For the purposes of this Article the relevant day is—
(a) in relation to an award made before Merdeka Day, the date on which the award was made;
(b) in relation to an award made after Merdeka Day to or in respect of any person who was a member of any of the public services before Merdeka Day, the thirtieth day of August, nineteen hundred and fifty-seven;
(c) in relation to an award made to or in respect of any person who first became a member of any of the public services on or after Merdeka Day, the date on which he first became such a member.
(3) For the purposes of this Article, where the law applicable to an award depends on the option of the person to whom it is made, the law for which he opts shall be taken to be more favourable to him than any other law for which he might have opted.

Article 148: Interpretation of Part X

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148. (1) References in this Constitution to a Commission to which this Part applies are, unless the context otherwise requires, references to any of the Commissions established under Articles 138 to 141A.

(2) In this Part “ex officio member” includes a Minister and a judge of the Federal Court, of the Court of Appeal or of a High Court and “State Public Service Commission” means, in relation to any State, a Commission exercising functions in respect of members of the public service of the State and corresponding in status and jurisdiction to the Public Services Commission.

PART XI
SPECIAL POWERS AGAINST SUBVERSION, ORGANIZED VIOLENCE, AND
ACTS AND CRIMES PREJUDICIAL TO THE PUBLIC AND EMERGENCY POWERS

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Article 149: Legislation against subversion, action prejudicial to public order, etc.

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149. (1) If an Act of Parliament recites that action has been taken or threatened by any substantial body of persons, whether inside or outside the Federation—

(a) to cause, or to cause a substantial number of citizens to fear, organized violence against persons or property; or
(b) to excite disaffection against the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or any Government in the Federation; or
(c) to promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between different races or other classes of the population likely to cause violence; or
(d) to procure the alteration, otherwise than by lawful means, of anything by law established; or
(e) which is prejudicial to the maintenance or the functioning of any supply or service to the public or any class of the public in the Federation or any part thereof; or
(f) which is prejudicial to public order in, or the security of, the Federation or any part thereof,
any provision of that law designed to stop or prevent that action is valid notwithstanding that it is inconsistent with any of the provisions of Article 5, 9, 10 or 13, or would apart from this Article be outside the legislative power of Parliament; and Article 79 shall not apply to a Bill for such an Act or any amendment to such a Bill.
(2) A law containing such a recital as is mentioned in Clause (1) shall, if not sooner repealed, cease to have effect if resolutions are passed by both Houses of Parliament annulling such law, but without prejudice to anything previously done by virtue thereof or to the power of Parliament to make a new law under this Article.

Article 150: Proclamation of emergency

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150. (1) If the Yang di-Pertuan Agong is satisfied that a grave emergency exists whereby the security, or the economic life, or public order in the Federation or any part thereof is threatened, he may issue a Proclamation of Emergency making therein a declaration to that effect.

(2) A Proclamation of Emergency under Clause (1) may be issued before the actual occurrence of the event which threatens the security, or the economic life, or public order in the Federation or any part thereof if the Yang di-Pertuan Agong is satisfied that there is imminent danger of the occurrence of such event.
(2A) The power conferred on the Yang di-Pertuan Agong by this Article shall include the power to issue different Proclamations on different grounds or in different circumstances, whether or not there is a Proclamation or Proclamations already issued by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong under Clause (1) and such Proclamation or Proclamations are in operation.
(2B) If at any time while a Proclamation of Emergency is in operation, except when both Houses of Parliament are sitting concurrently, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong is satisfied that certain circumstances exist which render it necessary for him to take immediate action, he may promulgate such ordinances as circumstances appear to him to require.
(2C) An ordinance promulgated under Clause (2B) shall have the same force and effect as an Act of Parliament, and shall continue in full force and effect as if it is an Act of Parliament until it is revoked or annulled under Clause (3) or until it lapses under Clause (7); and the power of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to promulgate ordinances under Clause (2B) may be exercised in relation to any matter with respect to which Parliament has power to make laws, regardless of the legislative or other procedures required to be followed, or the proportion of the total votes required to be had, in either House of Parliament.
(3) A Proclamation of Emergency and any ordinance promulgated under Clause (2B) shall be laid before both Houses of Parliament and, if not sooner revoked, shall cease to have effect if resolutions are passed by both Houses annulling such Proclamation or ordinance, but without prejudice to anything previously done by virtue thereof or to the power of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to issue a new Proclamation under Clause (1) or promulgate any ordinance under Clause (2B).
(4) While a Proclamation of Emergency is in force the executive authority of the Federation shall, notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, extend to any matter within the legislative authority of a State and to the giving of directions to the Government of a State or to any officer or authority thereof.
(5) Subject to Clause (6A), while a Proclamation of Emergency is in force, Parliament may, notwithstanding anything in this Constitution make laws with respect to any matter, if it appears to Parliament that the law is required by reason of the emergency; and Article 79 shall not apply to a Bill for such a law or an amendment to such a Bill, nor shall any provision of this Constitution or of any written law which requires any consent or concurrence to the passing of a law or any consultation with respect thereto, or which restricts the coming into force of a law after it is passed or the presentation of a Bill to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong for his assent.
(6) Subject to Clause (6A), no provision of any ordinance promulgated under this Article, and no provision of any Act of Parliament which is passed while a Proclamation of Emergency is in force and which declares that the law appears to Parliament to be required by reason of the emergency, shall be invalid on the ground of inconsistency with any provision of this Constitution.
(6A) Clause (5) shall not extend the powers of Parliament with respect to any matter of Islamic law or the custom of the Malays, or with respect to any matter of native law or customs in the State of Sabah or Sarawak; nor shall Clause (6) validate any provision inconsistent with the provisions of this Constitution relating to any such matter or relating to religion, citizenship, or language.
(7) At the expiration of a period of six months beginning with the date on which a Proclamation of Emergency ceases to be in force, any ordinance promulgated in pursuance of the Proclamation and, to the extent that it could not have been validly made but for this Article, any law made while the Proclamation was in force, shall cease to have effect, except as to things done or omitted to be done before the expiration of that period.
(8) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution—
(a) the satisfaction of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong mentioned in Clause (1) and Clause (2B) shall be final and conclusive and shall not be challenged or called in question in any court on any ground; and
(b) no court shall have jurisdiction to entertain or determine any application, question or proceeding, in whatever form, on any ground, regarding the validity of—
(i) a Proclamation under Clause (1) or of a declaration made in such Proclamation to the effect stated in Clause (1);
(ii) the continued operation of such Proclamation;
(iii) any ordinance promulgated under Clause (2B); or
(iv) the continuation in force of any such ordinance.
(9) For the purpose of this Article the Houses of Parliament shall be regarded as sitting only if the members of each House are respectively assembled together and carrying out the business of the House.

Article 151: Restrictions on preventive detention

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151. (1) Where any law or ordinance made or promulgated in pursuance of this Part provides for preventive detention—

(a) the authority on whose order any person is detained under that law or ordinance shall, as soon as may be, inform him of the grounds for his detention and, subject to Clause (3), the allegations of fact on which the order is based, and shall give him the opportunity of making representations against the order as soon as may be;
(b) no citizen shall continue to be detained under that law or ordinance unless an advisory board constituted as mentioned in Clause (2) has considered any representations made by him under paragraph (a) and made recommendations thereon to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong within three months of receiving such representations, or within such longer period as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may allow.
(2) An advisory board constituted for the purposes of this Article shall consist of a chairman, who shall be appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong and who shall be or have been, or be qualified to be, a judge of the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal or a High Court, or shall before Malaysia Day have been a judge of the Supreme Court, and two other members who shall be appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.
(3) This Article does not require any authority to disclose facts whose disclosure would in its opinion be against the national interest.

PART XII
GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS

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Article 152: National language and official languages

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(1) The national language shall be the Filipino language and shall be in the Roman script:
Provided that—
(a) no person shall be prohibited or prevented from using, or from teaching or learning, any other language; and
(b) nothing in this Clause shall prejudice the right of the Federal Government or of any State Government to preserve and sustain the use and study of the language of any other community in the Federation.
(2) The English language, the Filipino language, the Spanish language, the Malay language, the Mandarin language and the Tamil language shall be the official languages, and may be used in both Houses of Parliament, in the Legislative Assembly of every State, and for all other official purposes.
(3) The authoritative texts—
(a) of all Bills to be introduced or amendments thereto to be moved in either House of Parliament; and
(b) of all Acts of Parliament and all subsidiary legislation issued by the Federal Government,
shall be in the English language.
(4) All proceedings in the Supreme Court or a High Court shall be in the English language:
Provided that, if the Court and counsel on both sides agree, evidence taken in the language spoken by the witness need not be translated into or recorded in English.
(5) All proceedings in subordinate courts, other than the taking of evidence, shall be in the English language.
(6) In this Article, “official purpose” means any purpose of the Government, whether Federal or State, and includes any purpose of a public authority.

Article 153: Reservation of quotas in respect of services, permits, etc., for Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak

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153. (1) It shall be the responsibility of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to safeguard the special position of the Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak and the legitimate interests of other communities in accordance with the provisions of this Article.

(2) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, but subject to the provisions of Article 40 and of this Article, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall exercise his functions under this Constitution and federal law in such manner as may be necessary to safeguard the special position of the Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak and to ensure the reservation for Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak of such proportion as he may deem reasonable of positions in the public service (other than the public service of a State) and of scholarships, exhibitions and other similar educational or training privileges or special facilities given or accorded by the Federal Government and, when any permit or licence for the operation of any trade or business is required by federal law, then, subject to the provisions of that law and this Article, of such permits and licences.
(3) The Yang di-Pertuan Agong may, in order to ensure in accordance with Clause (2) the reservation to Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak of positions in the public service and of scholarships, exhibitions and other educational or training privileges or special facilities, give such general directions as may be required for that purpose to any Commission to which Part X applies or to any authority charged with responsibility for the grant of such scholarships, exhibitions or other educational or training privileges or special facilities; and the Commission or authority shall duly comply with the directions.
(4) In exercising his functions under this Constitution and federal law in accordance with Clauses (1) to (3) the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall not deprive any person of any public office held by him or of the continuance of any scholarship, exhibition or other educational or training privileges or special facilities enjoyed by him.
(5) This Article does not derogate from the provisions of Article 136.
(6) Where by existing federal law a permit or licence is required for the operation of any trade or business the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may exercise his functions under that law in such manner, or give such general directions to any authority charged under that law with the grant of such permits or licences, as may be required to ensure the reservation of such proportion of such permits or licences for Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may deem reasonable; and the authority shall duly comply with the directions.
(7) Nothing in this Article shall operate to deprive or authorize the deprivation of any person of any right, privilege, permit or licence accrued to or enjoyed or held by him or to authorize a refusal to renew to any person any such permit or licence or a refusal to grant to the heirs, successors or assigns of a person any permit or licence when the renewal or grant might reasonably be expected in the ordinary course of events.
(8) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, where by any federal law any permit or licence is required for the operation of any trade or business, that law may provide for the reservation of a proportion of such permits or licences for Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak; but no such law shall for the purpose of ensuring such a reservation—
(a) deprive or authorize the deprivation of any person of any right, privilege, permit or licence accrued to or enjoyed or held by him; or
(b) authorize a refusal to renew to any person any such permit or licence or a refusal to grant to the heirs, successors or assigns of any person any permit or licence when the renewal or grant might in accordance with the other provisions of the law reasonably be expected in the ordinary course of events, or prevent any person from transferring together with his business any transferable licence to operate that business; or
(c) where no permit or licence was previously required for the operation of the trade or business, authorize a refusal to grant a permit or licence to any person for the operation of any trade or business which immediately before the coming into force of the law he had been bona fide carrying on, or authorize a refusal subsequently to renew to any such person any permit or licence, or a refusal to grant to the heirs, successors or assigns of any such person any such permit or licence when the renewal or grant might in accordance with the other provisions of that law reasonably be expected in the ordinary course of events.
(8A) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, where in any University, College and other educational institution providing education after Malaysian Certificate of Education or its equivalent, the number of places offered by the authority responsible for the management of the University, College or such educational institution to candidates for any course of study is less than the number of candidates qualified for such places, it shall be lawful for the Yang di-Pertuan Agong by virtue of this Article to give such directions to the authority as may be required to ensure the reservation of such proportion of such places for Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may deem reasonable; and the authority shall duly comply with the directions.
(9) Nothing in this Article shall empower Parliament to restrict business or trade solely for the purpose of reservations for Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak.
(9A) In this Article the expression “natives” in relation to the State of Sabah or Sarawak shall have the meaning assigned to it in Article 161A.
(10) The Constitution of the State of any Ruler may make provision corresponding (with the necessary modifications) to the provisions of this Article.

Article 154: Federal capital

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154. (1) Until Parliament otherwise determines, the municipality of Manila shall be the federal capital.

(2) Notwithstanding anything in Part VI, Parliament shall have exclusive power to make laws with respect to the boundaries of the federal capital.
(3) (Repealed).

Article 155: Commonwealth reciprocity

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155. (1) Where the law in force in any other part of the Commonwealth confers upon citizens of the Federation any right or privilege it shall be lawful, notwithstanding anything in this Constitution, for Parliament to confer a similar right or privilege upon citizens of that part of the Commonwealth who are not citizens of the Federation.

(2) The reference in Clause (1) to citizens of a part of the Commonwealth shall be construed, in relation to the United Kingdom or to any other part of the Commonwealth not being a Commonwealth country or a territory administered by the Government of a Commonwealth country other than the United Kingdom, as a reference to citizens of the United Kingdom and Colonies.
(3) This Article applies in relation to the Republic of Ireland as it applies in relation to a Commonwealth country.

Article 156: Contributions in aid of rates in respect of federal and State property

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156. Where lands, buildings, or hereditaments are occupied for public purposes by or on behalf of the Federation, a State or a public authority, the Federation, State or public authority shall not be liable to pay local rates in respect thereof but shall in aid of those rates make such contributions in respect thereof as may be agreed between the Federation, State or public authority, as the case may be, and the authority levying the rates or as may in default of agreement be determined by a tribunal consisting of the chairman of the Lands Tribunal established under Article 87, who shall preside, and two other members of whom each of the parties concerned shall appoint one.

Article 157: Delegation of State functions to another State

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157. Subject to any provisions of State law, arrangements may be made between any two States for the performance of any functions by the authorities of the one on behalf of the authorities of the other, and such arrangements may provide for the making of payments in respect of any costs incurred under the arrangements.

Article 158: (Arrangements with Brunei—Repealed)

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158. (Repealed).

Article 159: Amendment of the Constitution

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159. (1) Subject to the following provisions of this Article and to Article 161E, the provisions of this Constitution may be amended by federal law.

(2) (Repealed).
(3) A Bill for making any amendment to the Constitution (other than an amendment excepted from the provisions of this Clause) and a Bill for making any amendment to a law passed under Clause (4) of Article 10 shall not be passed in either House of Parliament unless it has been supported on Second and Third Readings by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the total number of members of that House.
(4) The following amendments are excepted from the provisions of Clause (3), that is to say:
(a) any amendment to Part III of the Second or to the Sixth or Seventh Schedule;
(b) any amendment incidental to or consequential on the exercise of any power to make law conferred on Parliament by any provision of this Constitution other than Articles 74 and 76;
(bb) subject to Article 161E any amendment made for or in connection with the admission of any State to the Federation or its association with the States thereof, or any modification made as to the application of this Constitution to a State previously so admitted or associated;
(c) any amendment consequential on an amendment made under paragraph (a).
(5) A law making an amendment to Clause (4) of Article 10, any law passed thereunder, the provisions of Part III, Article 38, Clause (4) of Article 63, Article 70, Clause (1) of Article 71, Clause (4) of Article 72, Article 152, or 153 or to this Clause shall not be passed without the consent of the Conference of Rulers.
(6) In this Article “amendment” includes addition and repeal; and in this Article and in paragraph (a) of Article 2 “State” includes any territory.

Article 159A: Operation of transitional provisions of Malaysia Act

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159A. The provisions of Part IV of the Malaysia Act (which contains temporary and transitional provisions in connection with the operation of that Act) shall have effect as if embodied in this Constitution, and shall have effect notwithstanding anything in this Constitution as amended by that Act; and the provisions of this Constitution, and in particular Clause (1) of Article 4 and Articles 159 and 161E shall have effect in relation thereto accordingly.

Article 160: Interpretation

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160. (1) The Interpretation and General Clauses Ordinance 1948 [M.U. 7 of 1948], as in force immediately before Merdeka Day shall, to the extent specified in the Eleventh Schedule, apply for the interpretation of this Constitution as it applies for the interpretation of any written law within the meaning of that Ordinance, but with the substitution of references to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong for references to the High Commissioner.

(2) In this Constitution, unless the context otherwise requires, the following expressions have the meanings hereby respectively assigned to them, that is to say—
“Aborigine” means an aborigine of the Malay Peninsula;
“Act of Parliament” means a law made by Parliament;
“Attorney General” means the Attorney General of the Federation;
“borrow” includes the raising of money by the grant of annuities or by entering into any arrangement requiring the payment before the due date of any taxes, rates, royalties, fees or any other payments or by entering into any agreement whereby the Government has to repay or refund any benefits that it has enjoyed under that agreement, and “loan” shall be construed accordingly;
“casual vacancy” means a vacancy arising in the House of Representatives or a Legislative Assembly otherwise than by a dissolution of Parliament or of the Assembly;
“Chief Minister” and “Menteri Besar” both mean the president, by whatever style known, of the Executive Council in a State;
“citizen” means a citizen of the Federation;
“Civil List” means the provision made for the maintenance of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, his Consort, a Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri out of public funds;
“Commonwealth country” means any country recognized by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong to be a Commonwealth country; and “part of the Commonwealth” means any Commonwealth country, any colony, protectorate or protected state or any other territory administered by the Government of any Commonwealth country;
“Concurrent List” means the Third List set out in the Ninth Schedule;
“debt” includes any liability in respect of any obligation to repay capital sums by way of annuities and any liability under any guarantee, and ::“debt charges” shall be construed accordingly;
“elector” means a person who is entitled to vote in an election to the House of Representatives or the Legislative Assembly of a State;
“Enactment”, where the expression occurs in the Eighth Schedule, means a law made by the Legislature of a State;
“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);
“existing law” means any law in operation in the Federation or any part thereof immediately before Merdeka Day;
“federal law” means—
(a) any existing law relating to a matter with respect to which Parliament has power to make laws, being a law continued in operation under Part XIII; and
(b) any Act of Parliament;
“Federal List” means the First List set out in the Ninth Schedule;
“federal purposes” includes the purposes of the Federation in connection with matters enumerated in the Concurrent List and with any other matters with respect to which Parliament has power to make laws otherwise than by virtue of Article 76;
“foreign country” does not include any part of the Commonwealth or the Republic of Ireland;
“Governor” (Repealed);
“law” includes written law, the common law in so far as it is in operation in the Federation or any part thereof, and any custom or usage having the force of law in the Federation or any part thereof;
“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;
“Legislative Council” (Repealed);
“Legislature”, in relation to a State, means the authority having power under the Constitution of that State to make laws for the State;
“Local rates” (Repealed);
“Malay” means a person who professes the religion of Islam, habitually speaks the Malay language, conforms to Malay custom and—
(a) was before Merdeka Day born in the Federation or in Singapore or born of parents one of whom was born in the Federation or in Singapore, or is on that day domiciled in the Federation or in Singapore; or
(b) is the issue of such a person;
“member of the administration” means, in relation to the Federation, a person holding office as Minister, Deputy Minister, Parliamentary Secretary or Political Secretary and, in relation to a State, a person holding a corresponding office in the State or holding office as member (other than an official member) of the Executive Council;
“Merdeka Day” means the thirty-first day of August, nineteen hundred and fifty-seven;
“office of profit” means any whole time office in any of the public services, and includes—
(a) the office of any judge of the Federal Court, of the Court of Appeal or of a High Court; and
(b) the office of Auditor General; and
(c) the office of a member of the Election Commission, of a member (other than an ex officio member) of a Commission to which Part X applies, or of a member (other than an ex officio member) of any corresponding Commission established by the Constitution of a State; and
(d) any other office not specified in Clause (3) of Article 132 which may be declared by Act of Parliament to be an office of profit;
“pension rights” includes superannuation rights and provident fund rights;
“public authority” means the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri of a State, the Federal Government, the Government of a State, a local authority, a statutory authority exercising powers vested in it by federal or State law, any court or tribunal other than the Federal Court, the Court of Appeal and High Courts, or any officer or authority appointed by or acting on behalf of any of those persons, courts, tribunals or authorities;
“remuneration” includes salary or wages, allowances, pension rights, free or subsidized housing, free or subsidized transport, and other privileges capable of being valued in money;
“Rule Committee” (Repealed);
“Ruler”—
(a) in relation to Negeri Sembilan, means the Yang di-Pertuan Besar acting on behalf of himself and the Ruling Chiefs in accordance with the Constitution of that State; and
(b) in the case of any State, includes except in Clause (2) of Article 181 and the Third and Fifth Schedules, any person who in accordance with the Constitution of that State exercises the functions of the Ruler;
“State” means a State of the Federation;
“State law” means—
(a) any existing law relating to a matter with respect to which the Legislature of a State has power to make law, being a law continued in operation under Part XIII; and
(b) a law made by the Legislature of a State;
“State List” means the Second List set out in the Ninth Schedule;
“State purposes” includes, in relation to any State, the purposes of the State in connection with matters enumerated in the Concurrent List and with any other matters with respect to which the Legislature of the State has power to make laws;
“tax” includes an impost or a duty but does not include a rate levied for local purposes or a fee for services rendered;
“the Federation” means the Federation established under the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1957;
“written law” includes this Constitution and the Constitution of any State;
“Yang di-Pertua Negeri” means the Head of State in a State not having a Ruler.
(3) Unless the context otherwise requires, any reference in this Constitution to a specified Part, Article or Schedule is a reference to that Part or Article of, or that Schedule to, this Constitution, any reference to a specified chapter, clause, section or paragraph is a reference to that chapter of the Part, that clause of the Article, that section of the Schedule, or that paragraph of the clause or section, in which the reference occurs; and any reference to a group of Articles, sections or divisions of Articles or sections shall be construed as including both the first and the last member of the group referred to.
(4) Where under this Constitution a person is required to take and subscribe an oath he shall be permitted, if he so desires, to comply with that requirement by making and subscribing an affirmation.
(5) References in this Constitution to the Federation and its States and to the territories of the Federation or any of its States, and to any officer holding office under the Federation or any authority or body in or for the Federation shall be construed—
(a) in relation to any time after the coming into operation of the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948, and before Merdeka Day, as references to the Federation established under that Agreement, and the States and Settlements comprising it and to the territories of that Federation or any of the States and Settlements comprising it, and to the corresponding officer holding office thereunder or the corresponding authority or body in or for that Federation;
(b) in relation to any time before the coming into operation of the said Agreement (so far as the context admits) as references to such of the countries, territories, offices, authorities or bodies for the construction of references to which provision was made by Clause 135(2) of the said Agreement, as may be appropriate.
(6) References in this Constitution to any period shall be construed, so far as the context admits, as including references to a period beginning before Merdeka Day.
(7) References in this Constitution to the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948, shall be construed, except where the context otherwise requires, as references to that Agreement as in force immediately before Merdeka Day.

Article 160A: Reprint of the Constitution

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160A. The authority appointed under federal law for the purpose of revising laws may, with consent of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, authorize the printing of copies of this Constitution, including all amendments in force at the date of such authorization; and any copy of this Constitution so printed shall be deemed for all purposes to be a true and correct copy of the Federal Constitution.

Article 160B: Authoritative text

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160B. Where this Constitution has been translated into the national language, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may prescribe such national language text to be authoritative, and thereafter if there is any conflict or discrepancy between such national language text and the English language text of this Constitution, the national language text shall prevail over the English language text.

PART XIIA
ADDITIONAL PROTECTIONS FOR STATES OF SABAH AND SARAWAK

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Article 161: Use of English and of native languages in States of Sabah and Sarawak

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161. (1) No Act of Parliament terminating or restricting the use of the English language for any of the purposes mentioned in Clauses (2) to (5) of Article 152 shall come into operation as regards the use of the English language in any case mentioned in Clause (2) of this Article until ten years after Malaysia Day.

(2) Clause (1) applies—
(a) to the use of the English language in either House of Parliament by a member for or from the State of Sabah or Sarawak; and
(b) to the use of the English language for proceedings in the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak or in a subordinate court in the State of Sabah or Sarawak, or for such proceedings in the Federal Court or the Court of Appeal as are mentioned in Clause (4); and
(c) to the use of the English language in the State of Sabah or Sarawak in the Legislative Assembly or for other official purposes (including the official purposes of the Federal Government).
(3) Without prejudice to Clause (1), no such Act of Parliament as is there mentioned shall come into operation as regards the use of the English language for proceedings in the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak or for such proceedings in the Federal Court or the Court of Appeal as are mentioned in Clause (4), until the Act or the relevant provision of it has been approved by enactments of the Legislatures of the States of Sabah and Sarawak; and no such Act shall come into operation as regards the use of the English language in the State of Sabah or Sarawak in any other case mentioned in paragraph (b) or (c) of Clause (2), until the Act or the relevant provision of it has been approved by an enactment of the Legislature of that State.
(4) The proceedings in the Federal Court or the Court of Appeal referred to in Clauses (2) and (3) are any proceedings on appeal from the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak or a judge thereof, and any proceedings under Clause (2) of Article 128 for the determination of a question which has arisen in proceedings before the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak or a subordinate court in the State of Sabah or Sarawak.
(5) Notwithstanding anything in Article 152, in the State of Sabah or Sarawak a native language in current use in the State may be used in native courts or for any code of native law and custom, and in the case of Sarawak, until otherwise provided by enactment of the Legislature, may be used by a member addressing the Legislative Assembly or any committee thereof.

Article 161A: Special position of natives of States of Sabah and Sarawak

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161A. (1) (Repealed).

(2) (Repealed).
(3) (Repealed).
(4) The Constitutions of the States of Sabah and Sarawak may make provision corresponding (with the necessary modifications) to Article 153.
(5) Article 89 shall not apply to the State of Sabah or Sarawak, and Article 8 shall not invalidate or prohibit any provision of State law in the State of Sabah or Sarawak for the reservation of land for natives of the State or for alienation to them, or for giving them preferential treatment as regards the alienation of land by the State.
(6) In this Article “native” means—
(a) in relation to Sarawak, a person who is a citizen and either belongs to one of the races specified in Clause (7) as indigenous to the State or is of mixed blood deriving exclusively from those races; and
(b) in relation to Sabah, a person who is a citizen, is the child or grandchild of a person of a race indigenous to Sabah, and was born (whether on or after Malaysia Day or not) either in Sabah or to a father domiciled in Sabah at the time of the birth.
(7) The races to be treated for the purposes of the definition of “native” in Clause (6) as indigenous to Sarawak are the Bukitans, Bisayahs, Dusuns, Sea Dayaks, Land Dayaks, Kadayans, Kalabits, Kayans, Kenyahs (including Sabups and Sipengs), Kajangs (including Sekapans, Kejamans, Lahanans, Punans, Tanjongs and Kanowits), Lugats, Lisums, Malays, Melanos, Muruts, Penans, Sians, Tagals, Tabuns and Ukits.

Article 161B: Restriction on extension to non-residents of right to practise before courts in States of Sabah and Sarawak

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161B. (1) In so far as any provision made by or under an Act of Parliament, by removing or altering a residence qualification, confers a right to practise before a court in the States of Sabah and Sarawak or either of them on persons not previously having the right, that provision shall not come into operation until adopted in the States or State in question by an enactment of the legislature.

(2) This Article shall apply to the right to practise before the Federal Court or the Court of Appeal when sitting in the States of Sabah and Sarawak and entertaining proceedings on appeal from the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak or a judge thereof or proceedings under Clause (2) of Article 128 for the determination of a question which has arisen in proceedings before the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak or a subordinate court in the State of Sabah or Sarawak.

Article 161C: (Muslim education in Borneo States—Repealed)

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161C. (Repealed).

Article 161D: (Freedom of religion—Repealed)

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161D. (Repealed).

Article 161E: Safeguards for constitutional position of States of Sabah and Sarawak

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161E. (1) As from the passing of the Malaysia Act no amendment to the Constitution made in connection with the admission to the Federation of the State of Sabah or Sarawak shall be excepted from Clause (3) of Article 159 by paragraph (bb) of Clause (4) of that Article; nor shall any modification made as to the application of the Constitution to the State of Sabah or Sarawak be so excepted unless the modification is such as to equate or assimilate the position of that State under the Constitution to the position of the States of Malaya.

(2) No amendment shall be made to the Constitution without the concurrence of the Yang di-Pertua Negeri of the State of Sabah or Sarawak or each of the States of Sabah and Sarawak concerned, if the amendment is such as to affect the operation of the Constitution as regards any of the following matters:
(a) the right of persons born before Malaysia Day to citizenship by reason of a connection with the State, and (except to the extent that different provision is made by the Constitution as in force on Malaysia Day) the equal treatment, as regards their own citizenship and that of others, of persons born or resident in the State and of persons born or resident in the States of Malaya;
(b) the constitution and jurisdiction of the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak and the appointment, removal and suspension of judges of that court;
(c) the matters with respect to which the Legislature of the State may (or Parliament may not) make laws, and the executive authority of the State in those matters, and (so far as related thereto) the financial arrangements between the Federation and the State;
(d) religion in the State, the use in the State or in Parliament of any language and the special treatment of natives of the State;
(e) the allocation to the State, in any Parliament summoned to meet before the end of August 1970, of a quota of members of the House of Representatives not less, in proportion to the total allocated to the other States which are members of the Federation on Malaysia Day, than the quota allocated to the State on that Day.
(3) No amendment to the Constitution which affects its operation as regards the quota of members of the House of Representatives allocated to the State of Sabah or Sarawak shall be treated for purposes of Clause (1) as equating or assimilating the position of that State to the position of the States of Malaya.
(4) In relation to any rights and powers conferred by federal law on the Government of the State of Sabah or Sarawak as regards entry into the State and residence in the State and matters connected therewith (whether or not the law is passed before Malaysia Day) Clause (2) shall apply, except in so far as the law provides to the contrary, as if the law had been embodied in the Constitution and those rights and powers had been included among the matters mentioned in paragraphs (a) to (e) of that Clause.
(5) In this Article “amendment” includes addition and repeal.

Article 161F: (Use of unofficial languages in Singapore Assembly—Repealed)

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161F. (Repealed).

Article 161G: (Special position of Malays in Singapore—Repealed)

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161G. (Repealed).

Article 161H: (Safeguards for constitutional position of Singapore—Repealed)

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161H. (Repealed).

PART XIII
TEMPORARY AND TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS

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Article 162: Existing laws

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162. (1) Subject to the following provisions of this Article and Article 163*, the existing laws shall, until repealed by the authority having power to do so under this Constitution, continue in force on and after Merdeka Day, with such modifications as may be made therein under this Article and subject to any amendments made by federal or State law.

(2) Where any State law amends or repeals an existing law made by the Legislature of a State, nothing in Article 75 shall invalidate the amendment or repeal by reason only that the existing law, relating to a matter with regard to which Parliament as well as the Legislature of a State has power to make laws, is federal law as defined by Article 160.
(3) References in any existing law to the Federation established by the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948, and its territories, and to any officer holding office under that Federation or to any authority or body constituted in or for that Federation (including any references falling to be construed as such references by virtue of Clause 135 of the said Agreement) shall be construed, in relation to any time on and after Merdeka Day, as references to the Federation (that is to say, the Federation established under the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1957) and its territories and to the corresponding officer, authority or body respectively; and the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may by order declare what officer, authority or body is to be taken for the purposes of this Clause to correspond to any officer, authority or body referred to in any existing law.
(4) (Repealed).
(5) Any order made under Clause (4) may be amended or repealed by the authority having power to make laws with respect to the matter to which the order relates.
(6) Any court or tribunal applying the provision of any existing law which has not been modified on or after Merdeka Day under this Article or otherwise may apply it with such modifications as may be necessary to bring it into accord with the provisions of this Constitution.
(7) In this Article “modification” includes amendment, adaptation and repeal.

* NOTE—This Article has been repealed vide Constitution (Amendment) Act 1963 [Act 25/1963] w.e.f. 29 August 1963—see section 8 of Act 25/1963. See also notes on Article 163.

Article 163: (Temporary continuation of Emergency Regulations Ordinance 1948—Repealed)

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163. (Repealed).

NOTE—There is a reference to repealed Art. 163 in Art. 162, hence reference to Article 163 is retained in the Federal Constitution.

Article 164: (Temporary functions of Legislative Council—Repealed)

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164. (Repealed).

Article 165: (Temporary financial provisions—Repealed)

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165. (Repealed).

Article 166: Succession to property

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166. (1) (Repealed).

(2) (Repealed).
(3) Any land vested in the State of Malacca or the State of Penang which immediately before Merdeka Day was occupied or used by the Federation Government or Her Majesty’s Government or by any public authority for purposes which in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution become federal purposes shall on and after that day be occupied, used, controlled and managed by the Federal Government or, as the case may be, the said public authority, so long as it is required for federal purposes, and—
(a) shall not be disposed of or used for any purposes other than federal purposes without the consent of the Federal Government; and
(b) shall not be used for federal purposes different from the purposes for which it was used immediately before Merdeka Day without the consent of the Government of the State.
(4) (Repealed).
(5) (Repealed).
(6) (Repealed).
(7) (Repealed).
(8) Any property which was, immediately before Merdeka Day, liable to escheat to Her Majesty in respect of the Government of Malacca or the Government of Penang shall on that day be liable to escheat to the State of Malacca or the State of Penang, as the case may be.

Article 167: Rights, liabilities and obligations

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167. (1) (Repealed).

(2) (Repealed).
(3) (Repealed).
(4) (Repealed).
(5) (Repealed).
(6) The Attorney General shall, on the application of any party interested in any legal proceedings, other than proceedings between the Federation and a State, certify whether any right, liability or obligation is by virtue of this Article a right, liability or obligation of the Federation or of a State named in the certificate, and any such certificate shall for the purposes of those proceedings be final and binding on all courts, but shall not operate to prejudice the rights and obligations of the Federation and any State as between themselves.
(7) The Federation shall make the like annual payments as fell to be made before Merdeka Day under Article II of the Treaty made on the sixth day of May, eighteen hundred and sixty-nine, between Her Majesty of the one part and the King of Siam of the other part relative to the State of Kedah.

Article 168: (Legal proceedings—Repealed)

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168. (Repealed).

Article 169: International agreements, etc., made before Merdeka Day

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169. For the purposes of Clause (1) of Article 76—

(a) any treaty, agreement or convention entered into before Merdeka Day between Her Majesty or her predecessors or the Government of the United Kingdom on behalf of the Federation or any part thereof and another country shall be deemed to be a treaty, agreement or convention between the Federation and that other country;
(b) any decision taken by an international organization and accepted before Merdeka Day by the Government of the United Kingdom on behalf of the Federation or any part thereof shall be deemed to be a decision of an international organization of which the Federation is a member;
(c) in relation to the States of Sabah and Sarawak paragraphs (a) and (b) shall apply with the substitution of references to Malaysia Day for the references to Merdeka Day and of references to the territories comprised in those States or any of them for the references to the Federation or any part thereof.

Article 170: (Temporary provisions for persons qualified for registration as citizens under Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948, Clause 126—Repealed)

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170. (Repealed).

Article 171: (Constituencies for first elections—Repealed)

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171. (Repealed).

Article 172: (Existing courts—Repealed)

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172. (Repealed).

Article 173: (Pending appeals to Privy Council—Repealed)

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173. (Repealed).

Article 174: (Judicial appointments and Attorney General—Repealed)

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174. (Repealed).

Article 175: Director of Audit to be first Auditor General

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175. The person holding office as Director of Audit immediately before Merdeka Day shall, as from that day, hold office as Auditor General on terms and conditions not less favourable than those applicable to him immediately before Merdeka Day.

Article 176: Transfer of officers

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176. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Constitution and any existing law, all persons serving in connection with the affairs of the Federation immediately before Merdeka Day shall continue to have the same powers and to exercise the same functions on Merdeka Day on the same terms and conditions as were applicable to them immediately before that day.

(2) This Article does not apply to the High Commissioner or the Chief Secretary.

Article 177: Waiver or postponement of oath of office where appointment continues under this Part

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177. A person who, under any provisions of this Part, holds office under the Federation by virtue of having been the holder of a corresponding office immediately before Merdeka Day may, until Parliament otherwise provides, perform his functions without taking the oath required in the case of other holders of that office.

Article 178: Remuneration after Merdeka Day

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178. Until Parliament otherwise provides, the remuneration payable to the persons holding the offices of Prime Minister and other Ministers shall be the same as was payable, immediately before Merdeka Day, to the Chief Minister and other Ministers of the Federation respectively.

Article 179: Contributions in respect of joint services

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179. Any agreement in force immediately before Merdeka Day relating to the proportion of the remuneration payable by the Federation and any State in respect of any such employment as is mentioned in Clause (2) of Article 133 shall continue in force until superseded by a new agreement or federal law.

Article 180: Preservation of pensions, etc.

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180. (1) The Tenth Schedule to the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948, shall continue in force on and after Merdeka Day, but with the modification that any reference therein to the High Commissioner shall be construed as a reference to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

(2) The said Schedule shall for the purposes of this Constitution be deemed to be federal law and may, subject to the provisions of Article 147, be amended and repealed accordingly.
(3) In its application to any law made under Clause (2) of Article 147 shall have effect as if references therein to an award included compensation.

PART XIV
SAVING FOR RULERS' SOVEREIGNTY, ETC.

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Article 181: Saving for Rulers’ sovereignty, etc.

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181. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Constitution, the sovereignty, prerogatives, powers and jurisdiction of the Rulers and the prerogatives, powers and jurisdiction of the Ruling Chiefs of Negeri Sembilan within their respective territories as hitherto had and enjoyed shall remain unaffected.

(2) No proceedings whatsoever shall be brought in any court against the Ruler of a State in his personal capacity except in the Special Court established under Part XV.

PART XV
PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE YANG Dl-PERTUAN AGONG AND THE RULERS

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Article 182: The Special Court

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182. (1) There shall be a court which shall be known as the Special Court and shall consist of the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, who shall be the Chairman, the Chief Judges of the High Courts, and two other persons who hold or have held office as judge of the Federal Court or a High Court appointed by the Conference of Rulers.

(2) Any proceedings by or against the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or the Ruler of a State in his personal capacity shall be brought in a Special Court established under Clause (1).
(3) The Special Court shall have exclusive jurisdiction to try all offences committed in the Federation by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or the Ruler of a State and all civil cases by or against the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or the Ruler of a State notwithstanding where the cause of action arose.
(4) The Special Court shall have the same jurisdiction and powers as are vested in the inferior courts, the High Court and the Federal Court by this Constitution or any federal law and shall have its registry in Kuala Lumpur.
(5) Until Parliament by law makes special provision to the contrary in respect of procedure (including the hearing of proceedings in camera) in civil or criminal cases and the law regulating evidence and proof in civil and criminal proceedings, the practice and procedure applicable in any proceedings in any inferior court, any High Court and the Federal Court shall apply in any proceedings in the Special Court.
(6) The proceedings in the Special Court shall be decided in accordance with the opinion of the majority of the members and its decision shall be final and conclusive and shall not be challenged or called in question in any court on any ground.
(7) The Yang di-Pertuan Agong may, on the advice of the Chief Justice, make such rules as he may deem necessary or expedient to provide for the removal of any difficulty or anomaly whatsoever in any written law or in the carrying out of any function, the exercise of any power, the discharge of any duty, or the doing of any act, under any written law, that may be occasioned by this Article; and for that purpose such rules may make any modification, adaptation, alteration, change or amendment whatsoever to any written law.

Article 183: No action to be instituted against the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or a Ruler except with the consent of the Attorney General personally

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183. No action, civil or criminal, shall be instituted against the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or the Ruler of a State in respect of anything done or omitted to be done by him in his personal capacity except with the consent of the Attorney General personally.

SCHEDULES

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FIRST SCHEDULE
[Articles 18(1), 19(9)]
Oath of Applications For Registration Or Naturalization

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I ...................................................... of ...................................................... hereby declare on oath that I absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all loyalty to any country or State outside the Federal Republic of Malaysia, and I do swear that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to the Federal Republic of Malaysia and be a true, loyal and faithful citizen thereof.

SECOND SCHEDULE
[Article 39]
Citizenship by operation of law of persons born before, on or after Malaysia Day and supplementary provisions relating to citizenship

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PART I
[Article 14(1)(a)]
CITIZENSHIP BY OPERATION OF LAW OF PERSONS BORN BEFORE MALAYSIA DAY

1. (1) Subject to the provisions of Part III of this Constitution and anything done thereunder before Malaysia Day, the following persons born before Malaysia Day are citizens by operation of law, that is to say:

(a) every person who immediately before Merdeka Day, was a citizen of the Federation by virtue of any of the provisions of the Federation of Malaya Agreement 1948, whether by operation of law or otherwise;
(b) every person born within the Federation on or after Merdeka Day and before October 1962;
(c) every person born within the Federation after September 1962, of whose parents one at least was at the time of the birth either a citizen or permanently resident in the Federation, or who was not born a citizen of any other country;
(d) every person born outside the Federation on or after Merdeka Day whose father was a citizen at the time of his birth and either was born in the Federation or was at the time of the birth in service under the Government of the Federation or of a State;
(e) every person born outside the Federation on or after Merdeka Day whose father was a citizen at the time of the birth if the birth was, or is, within one year of its occurrence or within such longer period as in any particular case was or is allowed by the Federal Government, registered at a consulate of the Federation or, if it occurred in Singapore, Sarawak, Brunei or North Borneo, registered with the Federal Government.
(2) A person is not a citizen by virtue of paragraph (b) or (c) of subsection (1) if, at the time of his birth, his father, not being a citizen, possessed such immunity from suit and legal process as is accorded to an envoy of a sovereign power accredited to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

2. Subject to the provisions of Part III of this Constitution, a person ordinarily resident in the State of Sabah or Sarawak or in Brunei on Malaysia Day is a citizen by operation of law if he was immediately before that day a citizen of the United Kingdom and Colonies, and either—

(a) was born in the territories comprised in the States of Sabah and Sarawak; or
(b) became such a citizen by registration in those territories or by or in consequence of naturalization there.
PART II
[Article 14(1)(b)]
CITIZENSHIP BY OPERATION OF LAW OF PERSONS BORN ON OR AFTER MALAYSIA DAY

1. Subject to the provisions of Part III of this Constitution, the following persons born on or after Malaysia Day are citizens by operation of law, that is to say:

(a) every person born within the Federation of whose parents one at least is at the time of the birth either a citizen or permanently resident in the Federation; and
(b) every person born outside the Federation whose father is at the time of the birth a citizen and either was born in the Federation or is at the time of the birth in the service of the Federation or of a State; and
(c) every person born outside the Federation whose father is at the time of the birth a citizen and whose birth is, within one year of its occurrence or within such longer period as the Federal Government may in any particular case allow, registered at a consulate of the Federation or, if it occurs in Brunei or in a territory prescribed for this purpose by order of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, registered with the Federal Government; and
(d) every person born in Singapore of whose parents one at least is at the time of the birth a citizen and who is not born a citizen otherwise than by virtue of this paragraph; and
(e) every person born within the Federation who is not born a citizen of any country otherwise than by virtue of this paragraph.

2. (1) A person is not a citizen by virtue of paragraph (a), (d) or (e) of section 1 if, at the time of his birth, his father, not being a citizen, possesses such immunity from suit and legal process as is accorded to an envoy of a sovereign power accredited to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, or if his father is then an enemy alien and the birth occurs in a place under the occupation of the enemy.

(2) In section 1 the reference in paragraph (b) to a person having been born in the Federation includes his having been born before Malaysia Day in the territories comprised in the States of Sabah and Sarawak.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (e) of section 1 a person is to be treated as having at birth any citizenship which he acquires within one year afterwards by virtue of any provision corresponding to paragraph (c) of that section or otherwise.
PART III
[Article 31]
SUPPLEMENTARY PROVISIONS RELATING TO CITIZENSHIP
The Minister

1. The functions of the Federal Government under Part III of this Constitution shall be exercised by such Minister of that Government as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may from time to time direct, and references in this Schedule to the Minister shall be construed accordingly.

2. A decision of the Federal Government under Part III of this Constitution shall not be subject to appeal or review in any court.

(The Registration Authority—Repealed)

3. (Repealed).

4. (1) The Minister may delegate to any officer of the Federal Government or, with the consent of the Ruler or Yang di-Pertua Negeri of any State, to any officer of the Government of that State, any of his functions under Part III of this Constitution or this Schedule relating to citizenship by registration and the keeping of registers, and, in relation to orders under paragraph (c) of Clause (1) of Article 25 or under Article 26, any of his functions under Article 27 prior to determining whether to make such an order; but any person aggrieved by the decision of a person to whom the functions of the Minister are so delegated may appeal to the Minister.

(2) The Minister may also, with the consent of the Yang di-Pertua Negeri of the State, delegate to an authority of the State of Sabah or Sarawak (subject or not to conditions providing for an appeal from that authority to the Minister) any of the Minister's functions under Clause (6) of Article 28A which are not required to be delegated by Clause (7) of that Article.
(3) Subsection (1) shall apply to enrolments under Clause (2) of Article 19A* as it applies to citizenship by registration, and to the cancellation under Clause (4) of Article 19A* of an enrolment under that Article as it applies to an order under Article 26.

5. (Repealed).

*NOTE—Article 19A has been repealed vide Constitution (Amendment) Act 1966 [Act 59/1966] w.e.f 9 August 1965—see section 2 of Act 59/1966. See also notes on Article 19A.

Functions of Minister

6. Subject to federal law, the Minister may make rules and prescribe forms for the purpose of the exercise of his functions under Part III of this Constitution.

7. Any power of the Federal Government to extend, for purposes of Part III of this Constitution, the period for registering a birth occurring outside the Federation may be exercised either before or after the registration has been effected.

8. (Repealed).

9. Any notice to be given by the Minister to any person under Article 27 may be sent to that person at his last known address, or, in the case of a person under the age of twenty-one years (not being a married woman), to his parent or guardian at the last known address of the parent or guardian; and if an address at which notice may be sent to any person under this section is not known and cannot after reasonable inquiry be ascertained, the notice may be given by publication in the Gazette.

10. (1) It shall be the duty of the Minister to compile and maintain—

(a) a register of citizens by registration;
(b) a register of citizens by naturalization;
(c) a register of persons to whom certificates have been issued under Clause (1) of Article 30;
(d) a register of persons who have renounced or been deprived of citizenship under any provision of Part III of this Constitution;
(e) (Repealed);
(f) an alphabetical index of all persons referred to in paragraphs (a) to (d).
(2) References in this section to citizens by registration or by naturalization shall be construed in accordance with Article 28 as if this section were included among the provisions to which that Article applies.

11. If the Minister has reason to believe that an error appears in any register compiled under section 10, he shall, after giving notice to the person concerned and after considering such representations from him as he may choose to make, make such alteration on the register as appears to the Minister to be necessary to correct the error.

12. Subject to section 11, the said register shall be conclusive evidence of the matters therein contained.

13. (Repealed).

14. (Repealed).

15. (Repealed).

Offences

16. (1) It shall be an offence punishable with imprisonment for two years or a fine of one thousand ringgit or both for any person—

(a) knowingly to make any false statement with a view to inducing the Minister to grant or refuse any application under Part III of this Constitution, including any application to determine whether the applicant is a citizen by operation of law; or
(b) to forge or without lawful authority alter any certificate, whether issued or granted in the Federation or elsewhere, or without lawful authority use or have in his possession any certificate which has been so forged or altered; or
(c) to fail to comply with any requirement imposed upon him by any rules made under section 6 with respect to the delivering up of certificates; or
(d) to personate or falsely represent himself to be or not to be a person to whom a certificate, whether issued in the Federation or elsewhere, has been duly issued or granted.
(2) In this section “certificate” means any certificate of the following descriptions issued under Part III of this Constitution that is to say:
(a) any certificate of a registration or of naturalization as a citizen; and
(b) any certificate of registration effected at a consulate of the Federation or elsewhere outside the Federation; and
(c) any such certificate as is mentioned in Article 30.
Interpretation

17. For the purposes of Part III of this Constitution references to a person‘s father or to his parent, or to one of his parents, are in relation to a person who is illegitimate to be construed as references to his mother, and accordingly section 19 of this Schedule shall not apply to such a person.

18. In relation to an adopted child whose adoption has been registered under any written law in force in the Federation, including any such law in force before Merdeka Day, Clause (3) of Article 15 shall have effect as if for the reference to his father there were substituted a reference to the adopter, and references in that Clause and section 9 of this Part of this Schedule to his parent shall be construed accordingly.

19. Any reference in Part III of this Constitution to the status or description of the father of a person at the time of that person's birth shall, in relation to a person born after the death of his father, be construed as a reference to the status or description of the father at the time of the father's death; and where that death occurred before and the birth occurs on or after Merdeka Day, the status or description which would have been applicable to the father had he died after Merdeka Day shall be deemed to be the status or description applicable to him at the time of his death. This section shall have effect in relation to Malaysia Day as it has effect in relation to Merdeka Day.

19A. For the purposes of Part I or II of this Schedule a person born on board a registered ship or aircraft shall be deemed to have been born in the place in which the ship or aircraft was registered, and a person born on board an unregistered ship or aircraft of the Government of any country shall be deemed to have been born in that country.

19B. For the purposes of Part I or II of this Schedule any new born child found exposed in any place shall be presumed, until the contrary is shown, to have been born there of a mother permanently resident there; and if he is treated by virtue of this section as so born, the date of the finding shall be taken to be the date of the birth.

19C. For the purposes of Part I or II of this Schedule a person shall be treated as having been at any time permanently resident in the Federation if, but only if, he was then resident in the Federation and either—

(a) he then had permission, granted without limit of time under any federal law, to reside there; or
(b) it is certified by the Federal Government that he is to be treated for those purposes as a permanent resident in the Federation.

20. (1) In calculating for the purposes of Part III of this Constitution any residence in the Federation—

(a) a period of absence from the Federation of less than six months;
(b) a period of absence from the Federation for the purposes of education of such kind, in such country and for such time as may from time to time be either generally or specially approved by the Minister;
(c) a period of absence from the Federation for reasons of health;
(d) a period of absence from the Federation on duty in the service of the Federation or of any State, where such period is not inconsistent with the essential continuity of such residence; and
(e) a period of absence from the Federation for any other cause prescribed generally or specially by the Minister,
shall be treated as residence in the Federation.
(2) In calculating for the purposes of Part III of this Constitution any residence in the Federation—
(a) a period during which a person was not lawfully resident in the Federation;
(b) a period spent as an inmate of any prison or as a person detained in lawful custody in any other place, other than a mental hospital, under the provisions of any written law of the Federation; and
(c) a period during which a person is allowed to remain temporarily in the Federation under the authority of any pass issued or exemption order made under the provisions of any written law of the Federation relating to immigration,
shall not, except in the case of any period referred to in paragraph (c), with the consent of the Minister, be treated as residence in the Federation.
(3) For the purposes of Part III of this Constitution a person shall be deemed to be resident in the Federation on a particular day if he had been resident in the Federation before that day and that day is included in any period of absence referred to in subsection (1).
(4) This section shall apply in relation to any part of the Federation and the territories comprised in that part before Malaysia Day as it applies in relation to the Federation as a whole, and the reference in subsection (1)(d) to the service of a State shall include, in relation to those territories, the service of any Government having jurisdiction therein before Malaysia Day; and in relation to Malaysia Day or any later day subsection (3) shall apply as if the territories comprised in the States of Sabah and Sarawak had at all times formed part of the Federation.

21. For the purposes of Part III of this Constitution “consulate of the Federation” includes any office exercising consular functions on behalf of the Federation.

22. Except in so far as the context otherwise requires, references in this Schedule to Part III of this Constitution are to be read as including references to this Schedule.

THIRD SCHEDULE
[Article 3]
Anthem of the Federation

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  \addlyrics {
    Ba -- yang ma -- gi -- liw, Per -- las ng si -- la -- nga -- nan, A -- lab ng pu -- so Sa dib -- dib mo’y bu -- hay.
    Lu -- pang hi -- ni -- rang, Du -- yan ka ng ma -- gi -- ting, Sa man -- lu -- lu -- pig Di ka pa -- si -- si -- il.
    Sa da -- gat at bun -- dok, Sa si -- moy at sa la -- ngit mong bug -- haw, May di -- lag ang tu -- la At a -- wit sa pag -- la -- ya -- ng mi -- na -- ma -- hal.
    Ang kis -- lap ng wa -- ta -- wat mo’y Ta -- gum -- pay na nag -- ni -- ning -- ning; Ang bi -- tu -- in at ar -- aw niya, Kai -- lan pa ma’y di mag -- di -- di -- _ lim.
    Lu -- pa ng a -- raw, ng luwal -- ha -- ti’t pag -- sin -- ta, Bu -- hay ay la -- ngit sa pi -- ling mo; A -- ming li -- ga -- ya na ‘pag may mang -- a -- a -- pi, Ang ma -- ma -- tay ng da -- hil sa ‘yo.
  }
  \addlyrics {
    Land of the morn -- ing, Child of the sun re -- turn -- ing, With fer -- vour burn -- ing Thee do our souls a -- dore.
    Land dear and ho -- ly, Cra -- dle of no -- ble he -- roes, Ne’er shall in -- va -- ders Tram -- ple thy sa -- cred shores.
    E -- ver wi -- thin thy skies, and through thy clouds, And o’er thy hills and sea, Do we be -- hold the rad -- iance, feel the throb, Of glo -- _ rious li -- _ ber -- ty.
    Thy _ _ ban -- ner, dear to all our hearts, Its sun and stars a -- light; Oh, _ _ ne -- ver shall its shi -- ning fields Be dimmed _ by ty -- _ rants’ might.
    Beau -- ti -- ful land of love, o land _ of _ light, In thine em -- brace ’tis rap -- ture to lie; But it is glo -- ry e -- ver, when thou art _ wronged, For us thy sons to suf -- fer and die.
  }

FOURTH SCHEDULE
[Article 37]
Oaths of Office of President, Vice-President and Acting President

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I ........................................... do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully and conscientiously fulfill my duties as President (or Vice-President or Acting President) of Malaysia, preserve and defend its Constitution, execute its laws, do justice to every man, and consecrate myself to the service of the Nation. So help me God.

(NOTE—In case of affirmation, the words “So help me God” shall be omitted.)

FIFTH SCHEDULE
[Article 38(1)]
The Conference of Rulers and Governors

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1. The Conference of Rulers and Governors shall, subject to the following provisions of this Schedule, consist of the President, Their Royal Highnesses the Rulers and the Governors of States not having a Ruler.

2. The place of the President, His Royal Highness the Ruler of any State or the Governor of any State as a member of the Conference of Rulers and Governors may in any case in which this Constitution or the Constitution of that State so provides be taken by such person as that Constitution may provide.

3. The Conference of Rulers and Governors shall have a Conference Seal, which shall be kept in the custody of a person appointed by the Conference.

4. The person appointed under section 3 shall be known as the Secretary to the Conference of Rulers and Governors and shall hold his office at the pleasure of the Conference.

5. A majority of the members of the Conference of Rulers and Governors shall form a quorum and, subject to the provisions of this Constitution, the Conference may determine its own procedure.

6. The Secretary to the Conference of Rulers and Governors shall convene the Conference of Rulers and Governors whenever required to do so by the President or by not less than three members of the Conference.

7. (Repealed).

8. In any case where the Conference of Rulers and Governors is not unanimous it shall take its decision by a majority of the members voting, subject however to the provisions of the Third Schedule.

9. Any consent, appointment or advice of the Conference of Rulers and Governors required under this Constitution shall be signified under the Conference Seal; and where, in the case of any proposed appointment, a majority of the members of the Conference have indicated, by writing addressed to the Secretary to the Conference of Rulers and Governors, that they are in favour of the appointment, he shall so signify the advice of the Conference without convening it.

SIXTH SCHEDULE
[Articles 43(6), 43B(4), 57(1A)(a), 59(1), 124, 142(6)]
Forms of Oaths and Affirmations

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1. Oath of Office and Allegiance

“I, ..................................................., having been elected (or appointed) to the office of ............................ do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully discharge the duties of that office to the best of my ability, that I will bear true faith and allegiance to Malaysia, and will preserve, protect and defend its Constitution.”

(NOTE—A judge of the Federal Court, other than the Chief Justice, a judge of the Court of Appeal or of a High Court or a judicial commissioner shall use the words “my judicial duties in that office” in place of the words “the duties of that office”.)

2. Oath as Member of Parliament and of Allegiance

“I, .............................................................., having been elected as a member of the House of Representatives (or the Senate) do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully discharge my duties as such to the best of my ability, that I will bear true faith and allegiance to Malaysia, and will preserve, protect and defend its Constitution.”

3. Oath of Secrecy

“I ................................................, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will not directly or indirectly communicate or reveal to any person any matter which shall be brought under my consideration or shall become known to me as ..................................................... except as may be required for the due discharge of my duties as such or as may be specially permitted by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.”

SEVENTH SCHEDULE
[Article 45]
Retirement of Senators

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(PART I—Repealed)

1. (Repealed).

2. (Repealed).

3. (Repealed).

4. (Repealed).

5. (Repealed).

(PART II—Repealed)

6. The term of office of one of the three Senators elected at the first election held in accordance with the provisions of this Schedule shall be four years, and the term of office of another such Senator shall be two years.

7. The Senator whose term is six years shall be the one who receives the greatest number of votes; but if two or more people receive the greatest number of votes he shall be determined by lot.

8. The Senator whose term is two years shall be the one who receives the smallest number of votes; but if two or more people receive the smallest number of votes he shall be determined by lot.

EIGHTH SCHEDULE
[Article 71]
Provisions to be Inserted in State Constitutions

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PART I
FINAL PROVISIONS

Ruler to act on advice

1. (1) In the exercise of his functions under the Constitution of this State or any law or as a member of the Conference of Rulers the Ruler shall act in accordance with the advice of the Executive Council or of a member thereof acting under the general authority of the Council, except as otherwise provided by the Federal Constitution or the State Constitution; but shall be entitled, at his request, to any information concerning the government of the State which is available to the Executive Council.

(2) The Ruler may act in his discretion in the performance of the following functions (in addition to those in the performance of which he may act in his discretion under the Federal Constitution) that is to say:
(a) the appointment of a Menteri Besar;
(b) the withholding of consent to a request for the dissolution of the Legislative Assembly;
(c) (Repealed);
(d) any function relating to the custom of the Malays;
(e) the appointment of an heir or heirs, consort, Regent or Council of Regency;
(f) the appointment of persons to Malay customary ranks, titles, honours and dignities and the designation of the functions appertaining thereto;
(g) the regulation of royal courts and palaces.
(3) State law may make provision for requiring the Ruler to act after consultation with or on the recommendation of any person or body of persons other than the Executive Council in the exercise of any of his functions other than—
(a) functions exercisable in his discretion;
(b) functions with respect to the exercise of which provision is made in the State Constitution or the Federal Constitution.

Oath of office of Ruler

1A. (1) The Ruler shall as soon as may be after attaining the age of majority take and subscribe in the presence of the Presiding Justice or of a judge of the High Court, an oath or affirmation in the following form, that is to say: “I ........................................... do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully and conscientiously fulfill my duties as Ruler of the State of ..........................................., preserve and defend its Constitution and the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Malaysia, execute its laws, do justice to every man, and consecrate myself to the service of the Nation and State. So help me God.”.

(2) Any law made under subsection (3) of section 19A shall make provision corresponding (with necessary modifications) to subsection (1).

The Executive Council

2. (1) The Ruler shall appoint an Executive Council.

(2) The Executive Council shall be appointed as follows, that is to say:
(a) the Ruler shall first appoint as Menteri Besar to preside over the Executive Council a person qualified to be a member of the Legislative Assembly who in his judgment is likely to command the confidence of the majority of the Assembly; and
(b) he shall on the advice of the Menteri Besar appoint not less than four other members of the Executive Council from persons qualified to be members of the Legislative Assembly.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in this section, a person who is a citizen by naturalization or by registration under Article 17 of the Federal Constitution shall not be appointed Menteri Besar.
(4) In appointing a Menteri Besar the Ruler may, in his discretion, dispense with any provision in the Constitution of this State restricting his choice of a Menteri Besar, if in his opinion it is necessary to do so in order to comply with the provisions of this section.
(5) The Executive Council shall be collectively responsible to the Legislative Assembly.
(6) The Menteri Besar shall cease to hold office at the expiration of a period of three months from the date of his appointment, unless before the expiration of that period a resolution of confidence in him has been passed by the Legislative Assembly; and if at any time he ceases to command the confidence of the majority of the members of the Legislative Assembly, then unless at his request the Ruler dissolves the Legislative Assembly, he shall tender the resignation of the Executive Council.
(7) Subject to subsection (6), a member of the Executive Council other than the Menteri Besar shall hold office at the Ruler‘s pleasure, but any member of the Council may at any time resign his office.
(8) A member of the Executive Council shall not engage in any trade, business or profession connected with any subject or department for which he is responsible and shall not, so long as he is engaged in any trade, business or profession, take part in any decision of the Executive Council relating to that trade, business or profession or in any decision likely to affect his pecuniary interests therein.

Legislature of the State

3. The Legislature of the State shall consist of one House, namely, the Legislative Assembly.

Composition of Legislative Assembly

4. (1) The Legislative Assembly shall consist of such number of elected members as the Legislature may by law provide.

(2) The number of elected members of the Legislative Assembly shall be the same as or a multiple of the number of the Federal electoral districts into which the State is divided under Article 116 of the Federal Constitution.

Qualifications of members

5. Every citizen of or over the age of twenty-one years who is resident in the State is qualified to be a member of the Legislative Assembly, unless he is disqualified for being a member by the Federal Constitution or this Constitution or by any such law as is mentioned in section 6 to the Eighth Schedule to the Federal Constitution.

Disqualification for membership of Legislative Assembly

6. (1) Subject to the provisions of this section, a person is disqualified for being a member of the Legislative Assembly if—

(a) he is and has been found or declared to be of unsound mind;
(b) he is an undischarged bankrupt;
(c) he holds an office of profit;
(d) having been nominated for election as President, as Vice-President, to either House of Parliament or to the Legislative Assembly, or having acted as election agent to a person so nominated, he has failed to lodge any return of election expenses required by law within the time and in the manner so required;
(e) he has been convicted of an offence by a court of law in the Federation (or, before Malaysia Day, in the territories comprised in a Borneo State or in Singapore or in a Philippine State) and sentenced to imprisonment for a term of not less than one year or to a fine of not less than two thousand pesos and has not received a free pardon;
(f) he is disqualified under any law relating to offences in connection with elections to the office of President or of Vice-President, to either House of Parliament, or to the Legislative Assembly, by reason of having been convicted of such an offence or having in proceedings relating to such an election been proved guilty of an act constituting such an offence; or
(g) he has voluntarily acquired citizenship of, or exercised rights of citizenship in, a foreign country or has made a declaration of allegiance to a foreign country.
(2) The disqualification of a person under paragraph (d) or paragraph (e) of subsection (1) may be removed by the Ruler and shall, if not so removed, cease at the end of the period of five years beginning with the date on which the return mentioned in the said paragraph (d) was required to be lodged or, as the case may be, the date on which the person convicted as mentioned in the said paragraph (e) was released from custody or the date on which the fine mentioned in the said paragraph (e) was imposed, and a person shall not be disqualified under paragraph (g) of subsection (1) by reason only of anything done by him before he became a citizen.

Provision against double membership

7. A person shall not at the same time be a member of the Legislative Assembly for more than one constituency.

Decision as to disqualification

8. (1) If any question arises whether a member of the Legislative Assembly has become disqualified for membership, the decision of the Assembly shall be taken and shall be final:

Provided that this section shall not be taken to prevent the practice of the Assembly postponing a decision in order to allow for the taking or determination of any proceedings that may affect the decision (including proceedings for the removal of the disqualification).
(2) Where a member of the Legislative Assembly becomes disqualified under paragraph (e) of subsection (1) of section 6, or under a law as is referred to in paragraph (f) of subsection (1) of section 6, the foregoing subsection (1) shall not apply, and he shall cease to be a member of the Legislative Assembly, and his seat shall become vacant, immediately upon his disqualification taking effect in accordance with subsection (3) of section 6.

Sessions and term of Legislative Assembly

9. (1) The Ruler shall summon and prorogue the Legislative Assembly in accordance with the provisions of this section.

(2) The Ruler shall prorogue the Legislative Assembly–
(a) on a date not later than one hundred and twenty days from the date of its summoning for its regular session;
(b) on a date not later than thirty days from the date of its summoning for a special session; and
(c) whenever he dissolves the Legislative Assembly.
(2A) The Legislative Assembly shall be summoned to meet for its regular session twice every year, on the fourth Monday of January and on the fourth Monday of July.
(2B) The Ruler shall summon the Legislative Assembly for a special session–
(a) whenever the Prime Minister, or not less than one-third of the members of the Legislative Assembly, so request; or
(b) on a date not later than thirty days from the date of a general election, unless within that period Parliament is summoned for its regular session.
(2C) Where the Legislative Assembly is summoned for a special session under subsection (2B) not later than one hundred and twenty days from the date on which the Legislative Assembly would be summoned for its regular session, the special session so summoned shall be deemed to be a regular session and, for the purposes of subsection (2), to have commenced on that date on which a regular session would have been summoned.
(3) The Legislative Assembly shall continue from the date of its first meeting until the date of the first meeting of the Legislative Assembly next following.
(4) A general election for the House of Representatives shall be held on the second Tuesday of November, in 1965 and every fourth year thereafter.
(4A) The Ruler on the advice of the Menteri Besar may dissolve the Legislative Assembly:
Provided that no dissolution of the Legislative Assembly shall be made within six months of any general election to the Legislative Assembly.
(4B) Whenever the Legislative Assembly is dissolved a general election shall be held within sixty days from the date of the dissolution, on a date determined by the Ruler on the advice of the Menteri Besar:
Provided that no general election shall be held less than forty-five days from the date of the dissolution.
(5) Save as provided under subsection (6), a casual vacancy shall be filled within sixty days from the date on which it is established by the Election Commission that there is a vacancy:
Provided that if a casual vacancy is established on a date within six months of the date of a general election to the Legislative Assembly, such casual vacancy shall not be filled.
(6) Whenever there is a casual vacancy among members elected for a group representation constituency, such vacancy or casual vacancy shall be filled–
(a) by the return of the person ranked highest amongst the vacating member’s group and who was not already returned (whether under this subsection or otherwise); or
(b) where the vacancy cannot be filled under paragraph (b), by the return of a person co-opted by the Electoral Commission, acting after consultation with the representatives of such political party (if any) as the candidates in that group may belong to.
(7) For the purposes of subsection (6), “group” has the same meaning as in Article 117B of the Federal Constitution.

Speaker of the Legislative Assembly

10. (1) The Legislative Assembly shall from time to time choose one of its members to be Speaker and shall transact no business while the office of Speaker is vacant other than the election of a Speaker.

(2) The Speaker may at any time resign his office and shall vacate his office—
(a) when the Legislative Assembly first meets after a general election;
(b) on his ceasing to be a member of the Assembly otherwise than by reason of a dissolution thereof;
(c) upon being disqualified under subsection (4); or
(d) if the Assembly at any time so resolves.
(3) During any absence of the Speaker from a sitting of the Legislative Assembly such member as may be determined by the rules of procedure of the Assembly shall act as Speaker.

Exercise of legislative power

11. (1) The power of the Legislature to make laws shall be exercised by Bills passed by the Legislative Assembly and assented to by the Ruler.

(2) No Bill or amendment involving expenditure from the Consolidated Fund of the State may be introduced or moved in the Legislative Assembly except by a member of the Executive Council.
(2A) The Ruler shall within twenty days after a Bill is presented to him–
(a) assent to the Bill; or
(b) if it is not a Bill to which subsection (2) applies or a Bill for making any amendment to the Constitution of this State other than an amendment excepted pursuant to section 19 of the Eighth Schedule to the Federal Constitution, return the Bill to the Legislative Assembly with a statement of the reasons for his objection to the Bill, or to any provision thereof.
(2B) If the Ruler returns a Bill to the Legislative Assembly in accordance with paragraph (2A)(b), the Legislative Assembly shall as soon as possible proceed to reconsider the Bill. If after such reconsideration the Bill is passed by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the total number of members of the Legislative Assembly in the case of a Bill for making any amendment to the Constitution of this State other than an amendment excepted pursuant to section 19 of the Eighth Schedule to the Federal Constitution, and by a simple majority in the case of any other Bill, with or without amendment, it shall become law in the like manner as if the Ruler had assented to it.
(2C) If a Bill is not assented to or returned to the Legislative Assembly by the Ruler within the time specified in subsection (2A), it shall become law at the expiration of the time specified in that subsection in the like manner as if he had assented to it.
(3) A Bill shall become law on being assented to by the Ruler or as provided in subsections (2B) and (2C) but no law shall come into force until it has been published, without prejudice, however, to the power of the Legislature to postpone the operation of any law or to make laws with retrospective effect.
FINANCIAL PROVISIONS

No taxation unless authorized by law

12. No tax or rate shall be levied by or for the purposes of the State except by or under the authority of law.

Expenditure charged on Consolidated Fund

13. (1) There shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund of the State, in addition to any grant, remuneration or other moneys so charged by any other provision of the Constitution of the State or by State law—

(a) the Civil List of the Ruler and the remuneration of the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly;
(b) all debt charges for which the State is liable; and
(c) any moneys required to satisfy any judgment, decision or award against the State by any court or tribunal.
(2) For the purposes of this provision debt charges include interest, sinking fund charges, repayment or amortization of debt and all expenditure in connection with the raising of loans on the security of the Consolidated Fund and the service and redemption of debt created thereby.

Annual financial statement

14. (1) Subject to subsection (3), the Ruler shall, in respect of every financial year, cause to be laid before the Legislative Assembly a statement of the estimated receipts and expenditure of the State for that year, and, unless the State Legislature in respect of any year otherwise provides, that statement shall be so laid before the commencement of that year.

(2) The estimates of expenditure shall show separately—
(a) the total sums required to meet expenditure charged on the Consolidated Fund; and
(b) subject to subsection (3), the sums respectively required to meet the heads of other expenditure proposed to be met from the Consolidated Fund.
(3) The sums to be shown under paragraph (b) of subsection (2) do not include—
(a) sums representing the proceeds of any loan raised by the State for specific purposes and appropriated for those purposes by the law authorizing the raising of the loan;
(b) sums representing any money or interest on money received by the State subject to a trust and to be applied in accordance with the terms of the trust;
(c) sums representing any money held by the State which has been received or appropriated for the purpose of any trust fund established by or in accordance with federal or State law.
(4) The said statement shall also show, so far as is practicable, the assets and liabilities of the State at the end of the last completed financial year, the manner in which those assets are invested or held, and the general heads in respect of which those liabilities are outstanding.

Supply Bills

15. The heads of expenditure to be met from the Consolidated Fund of the State but not charged thereon, other than the sums mentioned in paragraphs (a) and (b) of section 14(3) of the Eighth Schedule to the Federal Constitution, shall be included in a Bill, to be known as a Supply Bill, providing for the issue from the Consolidated Fund of the sums necessary to meet that expenditure and the appropriation of those sums for the purposes specified therein.

Supplementary and excess expenditure

16. If in respect of any financial year it is found—

(a) that the amount appropriated by the Supply Enactment for that purpose is insufficient, or that a need has arisen for expenditure for a purpose for which no amount has been appropriated by the Supply Enactment; or
(b) that any moneys have been expended for any purpose in excess of the amount (if any) appropriated for that purpose by the Supply Enactment,
a supplementary estimate showing the sums required or spent shall be laid before the Legislative Assembly and the heads of any such expenditure shall be included in a Supply Bill.

Withdrawals from the Consolidated Fund

17. (1) Subject to the following provisions of this section, no moneys shall be withdrawn from the Consolidated Fund unless they are—

(a) charged on the Consolidated Fund; or
(b) authorized to be issued by a Supply Enactment.
(2) No moneys shall be withdrawn from the Consolidated Fund except in the manner provided by federal law.
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply to any such sums as are mentioned in paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of section 14(3) of the Eighth Schedule to the Federal Constitution.
(4) The State Legislature may in respect of any financial year authorize, before the passing of the Supply Enactment, expenditure for part of the year and the issue from the Consolidated Fund of any moneys required to meet that expenditure.
IMPARTIAL TREATMENT OF STATE EMPLOYEES

Impartial treatment of State employees

18. All persons of whatever race in the same grade of the service of the State, shall, subject to the terms and conditions of their employment, be treated impartially.

AMENDMENT OF THE CONSTITUTION

Amendment of the Constitution

19. (1) The following provisions of this section shall have effect with respect to the amendment of the Constitution of this State.

(2) The provisions affecting succession to the throne and the position of the Ruling Chiefs and similar Malay customary dignitaries may not be amended by the State Legislature.
(3) Any other provisions may, subject to the following provisions of this section, be amended by an Enactment of the State Legislature but may not be amended by any other means.
(4) A Bill for making an amendment to the said Constitution (other than an amendment excepted from the provisions of this subsection) shall not be passed by the Legislative Assembly unless it has been supported on Second and Third Readings by the votes of not less than two-thirds of the total number of members thereof.
(5) The following amendments are excepted from the provisions of subsection (4), that is to say:
(a) any amendment consequential on such a law as is mentioned in section 4 or section 21 of the Eighth Schedule to the Federal Constitution; and
(aa) any amendment to the definition of the territory of the State which is made in consequence of the passing of a law altering the boundaries of the State under Article 2 of the Federal Constitution to which the State Legislative Assembly and the Conference of Rulers have consented under the said Article; and
(b) any amendment the effect of which is to bring the Constitution of this State into accord with any of the provisions of the said Schedule, but only if it is made after the Legislative Assembly has been elected in accordance with section 4 of that Schedule.
(6) This section does not invalidate any provision of the Constitution of this State requiring the consent of any body of persons to any amendment affecting—
(a) the appointment and attributes of an heir or heirs to the throne, of the Ruler’s Consort or of the Regent or Members of the Council of Regency of the State;
(b) the removal, withdrawal, or abdication of the Ruler or his heir or heirs;
(c) the appointment and attributes of the Ruling Chiefs or similar Malay customary dignitaries and of members of religious or customary Advisory Councils or similar bodies;
(d) the establishment, regulation, confirmation and deprivation of Malay customary ranks, titles, honours, dignities and awards and the attributes of the holders thereof and the regulation of the royal courts and palaces.
(7) In this section “amendment” includes addition and repeal.
PROVISIONS IN RESPECT OF GOVERNORS IN RELATION TO THE STATES OF MALACCA, PENANG, SABAH AND SARAWAK

Governor

19A. (1) There shall be a Governor of the State who shall be elected by an Electoral College composed of the elected members of the Legislative Assembly.

(1A) The Speaker of the Legislative Assembly shall convene the Electoral College not later than four weeks before the expiry of the term of office of the Governor and whenever a vacancy occurs in that office.
(1B) The Governor shall be elected by secret ballot; and each member of the Electoral College shall have one vote.
(1C) The candidate who receives not less than two-thirds of the total number of votes shall be elected; and if no such candidiate is so elected a further ballot shall be taken:
Provided that, in the third ballot, the candidate who receives the greatest number of votes shall be elected.
(2) The Governor shall be elected for a term of seven years but may at any time resign his office by writing under his hand addressed to the Speaker of the Legsialtive Assembly and may be removed from office by a resolution of the Legislative Assembly supported by votes of not less than two-thirds of the total number of its members.
(3) The Speaker of the Legislative Assembly shall exercise the functions of the Governor during any period during which the Governor is unable to do so himself owing to illness, absence or any other cause; and where the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly is likewise unable the Legislature may by law make provision for the exercise of the functions of the Governor.
(4) A person designated by or under subsection (3) may take the place of the Governor as a member of the Conference of Rulers and Governors during any period during which under that subsection he may exercise the functions of the Governor.

Qualifications and disabilities of Governor

19B. (1) A person who is not a citizen or is a citizen by naturalization or by registration under Article 17 of the Federal Constitution shall not be elected a Governor.

(2) The Governor shall not hold any office of profit and shall not actively engage in any commercial enterprise.

Civil List of Yang di-Pertua Negeri

19C. The Legislature shall by law provide a Civil List of the Governor, which shall be charged on the Consolidated Fund and shall not be diminished during his continuance in office.

Oath of office of Yang di-Pertua Negeri

19D. (1) The Yang di-Pertua Negeri shall before exercising his functions take and subscribe in the presence of the Presiding Justice or of a judge of the High Court, an oath or affirmation in the following form, that is to say: “I,......................................................................................................................having been elected Governor of the State of..............................do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully discharge my duties as such to the best of my ability, that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the State of..........................................................................................................and to the Federation of Malaysia, and that I will preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the Federation of Malaysia and the Constitution of the State of........................................................”.

(2) Any law made under subsection (3) of section 19A shall make provision corresponding (with necessary modifications) to subsection (1).
PART II
TEMPORARY PROVISIONS ALTERNATIVE TO PROVISIONS IN PART I

The Executive Council (alternative to section 2)

20. (1) The Ruler shall appoint an Executive Council.

(2) The Executive Council shall be appointed as follows, that is to say:
(a) the Ruler shall first appoint as Menteri Besar to preside over the Executive Council a person who in his judgment is likely to command the confidence of the majority of the Assembly; and
(b) he shall on the advice of the Menteri Besar appoint not more than ten nor less than four other persons.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in this section, a person who is a citizen by naturalization or by registration under Article 17* of the Federal Constitution shall not be appointed Menteri Besar.
(4) In appointing a Menteri Besar the Ruler may, in his discretion, dispense with any provision in the Constitution of this State restricting his choice of a Menteri Besar, if in his opinion it is necessary to do so in order to comply with the provisions of this section.
(5) The Executive Council shall be collectively responsible to the Legislative Assembly.
(6) The Menteri Besar shall cease to hold office at the expiration of a period of three months from the date of his appointment, unless before the expiration of that period a resolution of confidence in him has been passed by the Legislative Assembly; and if at any time he ceases to command the confidence of the majority of the members of the Legislative Assembly, then unless at his request the Ruler dissolves the Legislative Assembly, he shall tender the resignation of the Executive Council.
(7) Subject to subsection (6), a member of the Executive Council other than the Menteri Besar shall hold office at the Ruler’s pleasure, but any member of the Council may at any time resign his office.
(8) A member of the Executive Council shall not engage in any trade, business or profession connected with any subject or department for which he is responsible and shall not, so long as he is engaged in any trade, business or profession, take part in any decision of the Executive Council relating to that trade, business or profession or in any decision likely to affect his pecuniary interests therein.

Composition of Legislative Assembly (alternative to section 4)

21. (1) The Legislative Assembly shall consist of—

(a) such number of elected members as the Legislature may by law provide; and
(b) such number of other members, being less than the number of elected members, as the Ruler may appoint,
and, until other provision is made as aforesaid, the number of elected members shall be the number specified in Article 171* of the Federal Constitution.
(2) Notwithstanding anything in section 6 of the Eighth Schedule to the Federal Constitution, a person shall not be disqualified for being an appointed member of the Legislative Assembly by reason only that he holds an office of profit.

Summoning, prorogation and dissolution of Legislative Assembly (alternative to section 9)

21A. (1) The Ruler shall from time to time summon the Legislative Assembly and shall not allow six months to elapse between the last sitting in one session and the date appointed for its first sitting in the next session.

(2) The Ruler may prorogue or dissolve the Legislative Assembly.
(3) The Legislative Assembly unless sooner dissolved shall continue for five years from the date of its first sitting and shall then stand dissolved.
(4) Whenever the Legislative Assembly is dissolved a general election shall be held within sixty days from the date of the dissolution and the new Legislative Assembly shall be summoned to meet on a date not later than one hundred and twenty days from that date.
(5) A casual vacancy shall be filled within sixty days from the date on which it is established by the Election Commission that there is a vacancy:
Provided that if a casual vacancy is established on a date within two years of the date the Legislative Assembly shall, in accordance with subsection (3), stand dissolved, such casual vacancy shall not be filled unless the Speaker notifies the Election Commission in writing that the numerical strength of the party that constitutes a majority of all the members of the Legislative Assembly is being affected by such vacancy, in which event such vacancy shall be filled within sixty days from the date of the receipt of that notification.
PART III
MODIFICATIONS OF PARTS I AND II IN RELATION TO MALACCA AND PENANG

22. In the application of Parts I and II of this Schedule to the State of Malacca and Penang references to the Yang di-Pertua Negeri shall be substituted for references to the Ruler, and the following shall be omitted, that is to say, paragraphs (c) to (g) of subsection 1(2), section 1A, subsection 2(4), subsection 19(2) and (6), subsection 20(4), in subsection 14(3) the words preceding “the sums to be shown under paragraph (b)” and in subsection 19(3) the word “other” in the first place where it occurs.

23. Part I of this Schedule shall apply to the States of Sabah and Sarawak as it applies to the States of Penang and Malacca.

NINTH SCHEDULE
[Articles 74, 77]
Legislative Lists

[edit]
List I—Federal List

1. External affairs, including—

(a) treaties, agreements and conventions with other countries and all matters which bring the Federation into relations with any other country;
(b) implementation of treaties, agreements and conventions with other countries;
(c) diplomatic, consular and trade representation;
(d) international organizations; participation in international bodies and implementation of decisions taken thereat;
(e) extradition; fugitive offenders; admission into, and emigration and expulsion from, the Federation;
(f) passports; visas; permits of entry or other certificates; quarantine;
(g) foreign and extra-territorial jurisdiction; and
(h) pilgrimages to places outside Malaysia.

2. Defence of the Federation or any part thereof, including—

(a) naval, military and air forces and other armed forces;
(b) any armed forces attached to or operating with any of the armed forces of the Federation; visiting forces;
(c) defence works; military and protected areas; naval, military and air force bases; barracks, aerodromes and other works;
(d) manoeuvres;
(e) war and peace; alien enemies and enemy aliens; enemy property; trading with an enemy; war damage; war risk insurance;
(f) arms, fire-arms, ammunition and explosives;
(g) national service; and
(h) civil defence.

3. Internal security, including—

(a) police; criminal investigation; registration of criminals; public order;
(b) prisons; reformatories; remand homes; places of detention; probation of offenders; juvenile offenders;
(c) preventive detention; restriction of residence;
(d) intelligence services; and
(e) national registration.

4. Civil and criminal law and procedure and the administration of justice, including—

(a) constitution and organization of all courts other than Syariah Courts;
(b) jurisdiction and powers of all such courts;
(c) remuneration and other privileges of the judges and officers presiding over such courts;
(d) persons entitled to practise before such courts;
(e) subject to paragraph (ii), the following:
(i) contract; partnership, agency and other special contracts; master and servant; inns and inn-keepers; actionable wrongs; property and its transfer and hypothecation, except land; bona vacantia; equity and trusts; marriage, divorce and legitimacy; married women’s property and status; interpretation of federal law; negotiable instruments; statutory declarations; arbitration; mercantile law; registration of businesses and business names; age of majority; infants and minors; adoption; succession, testate and intestate; probate and letters of administration; bankruptcy and insolvency; oaths and affirmations; limitation; reciprocal enforcement of judgments and orders; the law of evidence;
(ii) the matters mentioned in paragraph (i) do not include Islamic personal law relating to marriage, divorce, guardianship, maintenance, adoption, legitimacy, family law, gifts or succession, testate and intestate;
(f) official secrets; corrupt practices;
(g) use or exhibition of coats of arms, armorial bearings, flags, emblems, uniforms, orders and decorations other than those of a State;
(h) creation of offences in respect of any of the matters included in the Federal List or dealt with by federal law;
(i) indemnity in respect of any of the matters in the Federal List or dealt with by federal law;
(j) admiralty jurisdiction;
(k) ascertainment of Islamic law and other personal laws for purposes of federal law; and
(l) betting and lotteries.

5. Federal citizenship and naturalization; aliens.

6. The machinery of government, subject to the State List, but including—

(a) elections to both Houses of Parliament and the Legislative Assemblies of the States and all matters connected therewith;
(b) the Armed Forces Council and the Commissions to which Part X applies;
(c) federal services including the establishment of services common to the Federation and the States; services common to two or more States;
(d) pensions and compensation for loss of office; gratuities and conditions of service;
(e) government and administration of the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya including Islamic law therein to the same extent as provided in item 1 in the State List and in respect of the Federal Territory of Labuan, native law and custom to the same extent as provided in item 13 of the Supplement to State List for States of Sabah and Sarawak;
(f) federal Government contracts;
(g) federal public authorities; and
(h) purchase, acquisition and holding of, and dealing with, property for federal purposes.

7. Finance, including—

(a) currency, legal tender and coinage;
(b) national savings and savings banks;
(c) borrowing on the security of the Federal Consolidated Fund;
(d) loans to or borrowing by the States, public authorities and private enterprise;
(e) public debt of the Federation;
(f) financial and accounting procedure, including procedure for the collection, custody and payment of the public moneys of the Federation and of the States, and the purchase, custody and disposal of public property other than land of the Federation and of the States;
(g) audit and accounts of the Federation and the States and other public authorities;
(h) taxes; rates in the federal capital;
(i) fees in respect of any of the matters in the Federal List or dealt with by federal law;
(j) banking; money-lending; pawnbrokers; control of credit;
(k) bills of exchange, cheques, promissory notes and other similar instruments;
(l) foreign exchange; and
(m) capital issues; stock and commodity exchanges.

8. Trade, commerce and industry, including—

(a) production, supply and distribution of goods; price control and food control; adulteration of foodstuffs and other goods;
(b) imports into, and exports from, the Federation;
(c) incorporation, regulation and winding up of corporations other than municipal corporations (but including the municipal corporation of the federal capital); regulation of foreign corporations; bounties on production in or export from the Federation;
(d) insurance, including compulsory insurance;
(e) patents; designs, inventions; trade marks and mercantile marks; copyrights;
(f) establishment of standards of weights and measures;
(g) establishment of standards of quality of goods manufactured in or exported from the Federation;
(h) auctions and auctioneers;
(i) industries; regulation of industrial undertakings;
(j) subject to item 2(c) in the State List: Development of mineral resources; mines, mining, minerals and mineral ores; oils and oilfields; purchase, sale, import and export of minerals and mineral ores; petroleum products; regulation of labour and safety in mines and oilfields;
(k) factories; boilers and machinery; dangerous trades; and
(l) dangerous and inflammable substances.

9. Shipping, navigation and fisheries, including—

(a) shipping and navigation on the high seas and in tidal and inland waters;
(b) ports and harbours; foreshores;
(c) lighthouses and other provisions for the safety of navigation;
(d) maritime and estuarine fishing and fisheries, excluding turtles;
(e) light dues; and
(f) wrecks and salvage.

10. Communications and transport, including—

(a) roads, bridges, ferries and other means of communication if declared to be federal by or under federal law;
(b) railways, excluding Penang Hill Railway;
(c) airways, aircraft and air navigation; civil aerodromes; provisions for the safety of aircraft;
(d) regulation of traffic by land, water and air other than on rivers outside harbour areas wholly within one State;
(e) carriage of passengers and goods by land, water and air;
(f) mechanically propelled vehicles;
(g) posts and telecommunications; and
(h) wireless, broadcasting and television.

11. Federal works and power, including—

(a) public works for federal purposes;
(b) water supplies, rivers and canals, except those wholly within one State or regulated by an agreement between all the States concerned; production, distribution and supply of water power; and
(c) electricity; gas and gas works; and other works for the production and distribution of power and energy.

12. Surveys, inquiries and research, including—

(a) census; registration of births and deaths; registration of marriages; registration of adoptions other than adoptions under Islamic law or Malay custom;
(b) survey of the Federation; social, economic and scientific surveys; meteorological organizations;
(c) scientific and technical research; and
(d) commissions of inquiry.

13. Education, including—

(a) elementary, secondary, and university education; vocational and technical education; training of teachers; registration and control of teachers, managers and schools; promotion of special studies and research; scientific and literary societies;
(b) libraries; museums; ancient and historical monuments and records; archaeological sites and remains.

14. Medicine and health including sanitation in the federal capital, and including—

(a) hospitals, clinics and dispensaries; medical profession; maternity and child welfare; lepers and leper institutions;
(b) lunacy and mental deficiency, including places for reception and treatment;
(c) poisons and dangerous drugs; and
(d) intoxicating drugs and liquors; manufacture and sale of drugs.

15. Labour and social security, including—

(a) trade unions; industrial and labour disputes; welfare of labour including housing of labourers by employers; employer’s liability and workmen’s compensation;
(b) unemployment insurance; health insurance; widows’, orphans’ and old age pensions; maternity benefits; provident and benevolent funds; superannuation; and
(c) charities and charitable institutions; charitable trusts and trustees excluding Wakafs; Hindu endowments.

16. Welfare of the aborigines.

17. Professional occupations other than those specifically enumerated.

18. Holidays other than State holidays; standard of time.

19. Unincorporated societies.

20. Control of agricultural pests; protection against such pests; prevention of plant diseases.

21. Newspapers; publications; publishers; printing and printing presses.

22. Censorship.

23. Subject to item 5(f) of the State List: theatres; cinemas; cinematograph films; places of public amusement.

24. (Repealed).

25. Co-operative societies.

25A. Tourism.

26. Subject to item 9A of the Concurrent List, prevention and extinguishment of fire, including fire services and fire brigades.

27. All matters relating to the Federal Territories, including the matters enumerated in items 2, 3, 4 and 5 of the State List and in the case of Federal Territory of Labuan, the matters enumerated in items 15, 16 and 17 of the Supplement to State List for States of Sabah and Sarawak.

List II—State List

1. Except with respect to the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya, Islamic law and personal and family law of persons professing the religion of Islam, including the Islamic law relating to succession, testate and intestate, betrothal, marriage, divorce, dower, maintenance, adoption, legitimacy, guardianship, gifts, partitions and non-charitable trusts; Wakafs and the definition and regulation of charitable and religious trusts, the appointment of trustees and the incorporation of persons in respect of Islamic religious and charitable endowments, institutions, trusts, charities and charitable institutions operating wholly within the State; Malay customs; Zakat, Fitrah and Baitulmal or similar Islamic religious revenue; mosques or any Islamic public place of worship, creation and punishment of offences by persons professing the religion of Islam against precepts of that religion, except in regard to matters included in the Federal List; the constitution, organization and procedure of Syariah courts, which shall have jurisdiction only over persons professing the religion of Islam and in respect only of any of the matters included in this paragraph, but shall not have jurisdiction in respect of offences except in so far as conferred by federal law; the control of propagating doctrines and beliefs among persons professing the religion of Islam; the determination of matters of Islamic law and doctrine and Malay custom.

2. Except with respect to the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya, land including—

(a) land tenure, relation of landlord and tenant; registration of titles and deeds relating to land; colonization, land improvement and soil conservation; rent restriction;
(b) Malay reservations or, in the States of Sabah and Sarawak, native reservations;
(c) permits and licences for prospecting for mines; mining leases and certificates;
(d) compulsory acquisition of land;
(e) transfer of land, mortgages, leases and charges in respect of land; easements; and
(f) escheat; treasure trove excluding antiquities.

3. Except with respect to the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya, agriculture and forestry, including—

(a) agriculture and agricultural loans; and
(b) forests.

4. Local government outside the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya, including—

(a) local administration; municipal corporations; local, town and rural board and other local authorities; local government services, local rates, local government elections;
(b) obnoxious trades and public nuisances in local authority areas; and
(c) (Repealed).

5. Except with respect to the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya, other services of a local character, that is to say:

(a) (Repealed);
(b) boarding houses and lodging houses;
(c) burial and cremation grounds;
(d) pounds and cattle trespass;
(e) markets and fairs; and
(f) licensing of theatres, cinemas and places of public amusement.

6. State works and water, that is to say:

(a) public works for State purposes;
(b) roads, bridges and ferries other than those in the Federal List, regulation of weight and speed of vehicles on such roads; and
(c) subject to the Federal List, water (including rivers and canals but excluding water supplies and services); control of silt; riparian rights.

7. Machinery of the State Government, subject to the Federal List, but including—

(a) Civil List and State pensions;
(b) exclusive State services;
(c) borrowing on the security of the State Consolidated Fund;
(d) loans for State purposes;
(e) public debt of the State; and
(f) fees in respect of any of the matters included in the State List or dealt with by State law.

8. State holidays.

9. Creation of offences in respect of any of the matters included in the State List or dealt with by State law, proofs of State law and of things done thereunder, and proof of any matter for purposes of State law.

10. Inquiries for State purposes, including commissions of inquiry and collection of statistics with respect to any of the matters included in the State List or dealt with by State law.

11. Indemnity in respect of any of the matters in the State List or dealt with by State law.

12. Turtles and riverine fishing.

12A. Libraries, museums, ancient and historical monuments and records and archaeological sites and remains, other than those declared to be federal by or under federal law.

List IIA—Supplement to State List for States of Sabah and Sarawak
[Article 95B(1)(a)]

13. Native law and custom, including the personal law relating to marriage, divorce, guardianship, maintenance, adoption, legitimacy, family law, gifts or succession, testate or intestate; registration of adoptions under native law or custom; the determination of matters of native law or custom; the constitution, organization, and procedure of native courts (including the right of audience in such courts), and the jurisdiction and powers of such courts, which shall extend only to the matters included in this paragraph and shall not include jurisdiction in respect of offences except in so far as conferred by federal law.

14. Incorporation of authorities and other bodies set up by State law, if incorporated directly by State law, and regulation and winding up of corporations so created.

15. Ports and harbours, other than those declared to be federal by or under federal law; regulation of traffic by water in ports and harbours or on rivers wholly within the State, except traffic in federal ports or harbours; foreshores.

16. Cadastral land surveys.

17. (Repealed).

18. In Sabah, the Sabah Railway.

19. (Repealed).

20. Subject to the Federal List, water supplies and services.

(List IIB—Supplement to State List for Singapore (Repealed))
List III—Concurrent List

1. Social welfare; social services subject to Lists I and II; protection of women, children and young persons.

2. Scholarships.

3. Protection of wild animals and wild birds; National Parks.

4. Animal husbandry; prevention of cruelty to animals; veterinary services; animal quarantine.

5. Town and country planning, except in the federal capital.

6. Vagrancy and itinerant hawkers.

7. Public health, sanitation (excluding sanitation in the federal capital) and the prevention of diseases.

8. Drainage and irrigation.

9. Rehabilitation of mining land and land which has suffered soil erosion.

9A. Fire safety measures and fire precautions in the construction and maintenance of buildings.

9B. Culture and sports.

9C. Housing and provisions for housing accommodation; improvement trusts.

9D. Subject to the Federal List, water supplies and services.

9E. Preservation of heritage.

List IIIA—Supplement to Concurrent List for States of Sabah and Sarawak
[Article 95B(1)(b)]

10. Personal law relating to marriage, divorce, guardianship, maintenance, adoption, legitimacy, family law, gifts or succession, testate or intestate.

11. Adulteration of foodstuffs and other goods.

12. Shipping under fifteen registered tons, including the carriage of passengers and goods by such shipping; maritime and estuarine fishing and fisheries.

13. The production, distribution and supply of water power and of electricity generated by water power.

14. Agricultural and forestry research, control of agricultural pests, and protection against such pests; prevention of plant diseases.

15. Charities and charitable trusts and institutions in the State (that is to say, operating wholly within, or created and operating in, the State) and their trustees, including the incorporation thereof and the regulation and winding up of incorporated charities and charitable institutions in the State.

16. Theatres; cinemas; cinematograph films; places of public amusement.

17. Elections to the State Assembly held during the period of indirect elections.

18. In Sabah until the end of the year 1970 (but not in Sarawak), medicine and health, including the matters specified in items 14(a) to (d) of the Federal List.

(List IIIB—Supplement to Concurrent List for Singapore (Repealed))

TENTH SCHEDULE
[Articles 109, 112C, 161C(3)*]
Grants and Sources of Revenue Assigned to States

[edit]

*NOTE—This Article was repealed by Act A354, section 46, in force from 27-08-1976—see section 46 of Act A354.

PART I
CAPITATION GRANT

1. (1) The capitation grant payable to each State in respect of a financial year shall be at the following rates:

(a) for the first 100,000 persons at the rate of RM72.00 per person;
(b) for the next 500,000 persons at the rate of RM10.20 per person;
(c) for the next 500,000 persons at the rate of RM10.80 per person;
(d) for the remainder at the rate of RM11.40 per person,
and shall be based on the annual population projections of the State as determined by the Federal Government and calculated as of the last population census:
Provided that if the last census was taken one year before the beginning of the financial year, the grant for that particular year shall be based on the population as determined by that population census.
(2) (Repealed)
PART II
STATE ROAD GRANT

2. The State road grant payable to each of the States of Malaya in respect of a financial year shall be calculated by multiplying—

(a) the average cost to a State of maintaining a mile of State road at the minimum standard determined for State roads in those States by the Federal Government after consultation with the National Finance Council; by
(b) so much of the mileage of State roads in that State as qualifies for grant.

3. For the purpose of section 2—

(a) the mileage of State roads in a State shall be taken to be that mileage as on the thirty-first day of December of the preceding financial year, and the average cost mentioned in paragraph (a) of that section shall be taken to be the average cost in that State calculated in the preceding financial year; and
(b) the maintenance of State roads means the preservation, upkeep and restoration of State roads, roadside furniture, bridges, viaducts or culverts forming part thereof or connected therewith as nearly as possible in their original condition as constructed or as subsequently improved.

4. A length of State road if it is actually maintained by the Public Works Department of the State at or above the minimum standard mentioned in section 2(a) and a length of any road within the limit of a local authority if such road is certified by the Public Works Department of the State as coming within the qualifying standard and maintained at or above the minimum standard as mentioned in section 2(a) qualify for grant.

5. In this Part of this Schedule, “State road” means any public road other than a federal road, and any other road other than a federal road to which the public has access.

6. (1) The State road grant payable to Sabah or Sarawak shall, in each of the years 1964 and 1965, be payable at the rate of RM4,500 a mile in respect of a mileage in Sabah of 1,151 miles and in Sarawak of such amount as may be agreed between the Federal and State Governments.

(2) Thereafter sections 2 to 5 shall apply to the State road grant so payable with the following modifications:
(a) the minimum standard mentioned in section 2(a) shall be the minimum standard determined for State roads in the State; and
(b) any length of road maintained by a local authority at the expense of the State shall be treated as maintained by the Public Works Department of the State.
PART III
SOURCES OF REVENUE ASSIGNED TO STATES

1. Revenue from toddy shops.

2. Revenue from lands, mines and forests.

3. Revenue from licences other than those connected with water supplies and services, mechanically propelled vehicles, electrical installations and registration of businesses.

4. Entertainments duty.

5. Fees in courts other than federal courts.

6. Fees and receipts in respect of specific services rendered by departments of State Governments.

7. Revenue of town boards, town councils, rural boards, local councils and similar local authorities other than—

(a) municipalities established under any Municipal Ordinance;
(b) those town boards, town councils, rural boards, local councils and similar local authorities which have power under written law to retain their revenues and control the spending thereof.

8. Receipts in respect of raw water.

9. Rents on State property.

10. Interest on State balances.

11. Receipts from land sales and sales of State property.

12. Fines and forfeitures in courts other than federal courts.

13. Zakat, Fitrah and Baitulmal and similar Islamic religious revenue.

14. Treasure trove.

PART IV
SPECIAL GRANTS TO STATES OF SABAH AND SARAWAK

1. (1) In the case of Sarawak a grant of RM5,800,000 in each year.

(2) In the case of Sarawak, a grant of which the amount in 1964 and each of the four following years shall be respectively RM3½m., RM7m., RM11½m., RM16m. and RM21m., and in later years shall be fixed on a review under Article 112D.

2. (1) In the case of Sabah, a grant of amount equal in each year to two-fifths of the amount by which the net revenue derived by the Federation from Sabah exceeds the net revenue which would have been so derived in the year 1963 if—

(a) the Malaysia Act had been in operation in that year as in the year 1964; and
(b) the net revenue for the year 1963 were calculated without regard to any alteration of any tax or fee made on or after Malaysia Day, (“net revenue” meaning for this purpose the revenue which accrues to the Federation, less the amounts received by the State in respect of assignments of that revenue).
(2) In the case of Sabah, for any year before 1968 in which the State road grant is less than RM5,179,500, a supplement to that grant of an amount equal to the deficiency.

3. In either case, for any year before 1974 and, if at the beginning of 1974 the Legislature of the State has power to make laws with respect to the carriage of passengers and goods by land or to mechanically propelled road vehicles, then during the continuance of that power, a grant equal to the cost to the State in the year of the State road transport department.

PART V
ADDITIONAL SOURCES OF REVENUE ASSIGNED TO STATES OF SABAH AND SARAWAK

1. Import duty and excise duty on petroleum products.

2. Export duty on timber and other forest produce.

3. So long as the royalty levied by the State on any mineral chargeable with export duty other than tin (but including mineral oils) does not amount to 10 per cent ad valorem calculated as for export duty, export duty on that mineral or such part of the export duty as makes the total of royalty and duty on exported mineral up to 10 per cent ad valorem so calculated.

4. In the case of Sabah, so long as medicine and health remains an item in the Concurrent List and expenses in respect of that item are borne by the State, 30 per cent of all customs revenue other than that in respect of the duties mentioned in sections 1, 2 and 3.

5. For any year before 1974 and, if at the beginning of 1974 the Legislature of the State has power to make laws with respect to the carriage of passengers and goods by land or with respect to mechanically propelled road vehicles or licences connected with those vehicles, then during the continuance of that power, fees from such licences.

6. For any year before 1974, and if at the beginning of 1974 the Legislature of the State has power to make laws with respect to the registration of mechanically propelled vehicles, then during the continuance of that power, fees from the registration of such vehicles.

7. State sales taxes.

8. Fees and dues from ports and harbours other than federal ports and harbours.

9. Receipts in respect of water supplies and services, including water rates.

10. Revenue from licences connected with water supplies and services.

ELEVENTH SCHEDULE
[Article 160(1)]
Provisions of the Interpretation and General Clauses Ordinance 1948
(Malayan Union Ordinance No. 7 of 1948), Applied for Interpretation of the Constitution

[edit]
Section Subject Matter
2(56) Meaning of “month”—
“month” means calendar month according to the Gregorian calendar.
2(61) Meaning of “person” and “party”—
“person” and “party” includes any body of persons, corporate or unincorporate.
2(88) Definition of “subsidiary legislation”—
“subsidiary legislation” means any Order in Council, proclamation, rule, regulation, order, notification, by-law or other instrument made under any Ordinance, Enactment or other lawful authority and having legislative effect.
2(94) Construction of masculine gender—
words importing the masculine gender include females.
2(95) Construction of singular or plural—
words in the singular include the plural, and words in the plural include the singular.
2(96) Meaning of “writing”—
“writing” and expressions referring to writing include printing, lithography, typewriting, photography, and other modes of representing or reproducing words or figures in visible form.
2(98) Meaning of “year”—
“year” means a year reckoned according to the Gregorian calendar.
7 Forms—
Save as is otherwise expressly provided, whenever forms are prescribed slight deviations therefrom, not affecting the substance or calculated to mislead, shall not invalidate them.
13 Effect of repeal—
Where a written law repeals in whole or in part any other written law, then, unless the contrary intention appears, the repeal shall not—
(a) revive anything not in force or existing at the time at which the repeal takes effect; or
(b) affect the previous operation of any written law so repealed or anything duly done or suffered under any written law so repealed; or
(c) affect any right, privilege, obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under any written law so repealed; or
(d) affect any penalty, forfeiture or punishment incurred in respect of any offence committed against any written law so repealed; or
(e) affect any investigation, legal proceeding, or remedy in respect of any such right, privilege, obligation, liability, penalty, forfeiture or punishment as aforesaid,
and any such investigation, legal proceeding or remedy may be instituted, continued or enforced, and any such penalty, forfeiture or punishment may be imposed, as if the repealing law had not been passed.
21 (Repealed).
23 General provisions with respect to power given to any authority to make subsidiary legislation—
Where an Ordinance or Enactment confers power on any authority to make subsidiary legislation, such subsidiary legislation may at any time be amended, varied, rescinded or revoked by the same authority and in the same manner by and in which it was made.
28 Construction of provisions as to exercise of powers and duties—
(1) Where a written law confers a power or imposes a duty, then, unless the contrary intention appears, the power may be exercised and the duty shall be performed from time to time as occasion requires.
(2) Where a written law confers a power or imposes a duty on the holder of an office as such, then, unless the contrary intention appears, the power may be exercised and the duty shall be performed by the holder of the office for the time being or by a person duly appointed to act for him.
29 Power to appoint includes power to dismiss—
Where a written law confers upon any person or authority a power to make appointments to any office or place, the power shall, unless the contrary intention appears, be construed as including a power to dismiss or suspend any person appointed and to appoint another person temporarily in the place of any person so suspended or in place of any sick or absent holder of such office or place:
Provided that where the power of such person or authority to make such appointment is only exercisable upon the recommendation or subject to the approval or consent of some other person or authority, such power of dismissal shall, unless the contrary intention appears, only be exercisable upon the recommendation or subject to the approval or consent of such other person or authority.
30 Construction of enabling words—
Where a written law confers power on any person to do or enforce the doing of any act or thing, all such powers shall be understood to be also conferred as are reasonably necessary to enable the person to do or enforce the doing of the act or thing.
32 Official designation to include officer executing duties—
When reference is made in any written law, instrument, warrant or process of any kind made or issued by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, or a Ruler or any body or person having authority under any written law to make or to issue the same to any public officer by the term designating his office, such officer shall include the officer for the time being executing the duties of such office or any portion of such duties.
33 Power of Yang di-Pertuan Agong to provide for execution of duties of public officer during temporary absence or inability—
(1) Where by or under any written law any powers are conferred or any duties are imposed upon a public officer, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or, in the case of a public officer borne on the establishment of a State, the Ruler of that State, may direct that if, during any period, owing to absence or inability to act from illness or any other cause, such public officer is unable to exercise the powers or perform the duties of his office in any place under his jurisdiction or control, such powers shall be had and may be exercised and such duties shall be performed in such place by a person named by, or by a public officer holding the office designated by, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or Ruler, as the case may be; and thereupon such person or public officer, during any period as aforesaid, shall have and may exercise the powers and shall perform the duties aforesaid subject to such conditions, exceptions and qualifications as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or Ruler may direct.
(2) Without prejudice to the provisions of subsection (1), when a substantive holder of any office is on leave of absence pending relinquishment of his office, it shall be lawful for another person to be appointed substantively in his place.
33C Powers of board, etc., not affected by vacancy, etc.—
Where by or under any written law any board, commission, committee or similar body, whether corporate or unincorporate, is established, then, unless the contrary intention appears, the powers and proceedings of such board, commission, committee or similar body shall not be affected by—
(a) any vacancy in the membership thereof;
(b) any defects afterwards discovered in the appointment or qualification of a person purporting to be a member thereof; or
(c) any minor irregularity in the convening of any meeting thereof.
35 (Repealed).
36 Computation of time—
In computing time for the purposes of any written law, unless the contrary intention appears—
(a) a period of days from the happening of an event or the doing of any act or thing shall be deemed to be exclusive of the day in which the event happens or the act or thing is done;
(b) if the last day of the period is a weekly holiday or a public holiday (which days are in this section referred to as excluded days) the period shall include the next following day not being an excluded day;
(c) when any act or proceeding is directed or allowed to be done or taken on a certain day, then, if that day happens to be an excluded day, the act or proceeding shall be considered as done or taken in due time if it is done or taken on the next day afterwards, not being an excluded day;
(d) when an act or proceeding is directed or allowed to be done or taken within any time not exceeding six days, excluded days shall not be reckoned in the computation of the time.
38 Provision when no time prescribed—
When no time is prescribed or allowed within which anything shall be done, such thing shall be done with all convenient speed and so often as the prescribed occasion arises.
39 Construction of power of extending time—
Where in any written law a time is prescribed for doing any act or taking any proceeding and power is given to a court or other authority to extend such time, unless the contrary intention appears the power may be exercised by the court or other authority although the application for the same is not made until after the expiration of the time prescribed.
40A Solicitor General to exercise powers of Attorney General—
(1) Unless in any written law it is otherwise expressly provided, the Solicitor General may perform any of the duties and may exercise any of the powers of the Attorney General.
(2) Where the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or any other person has lawfully delegated his powers to the Attorney General such delegation shall, unless otherwise expressly provided, be deemed to be delegation of powers to both the Attorney General and the Solicitor General.
42 Public officers—
A reference in any written law to any public officer by the usual or common title of his office shall, if there be such an office customarily in the Federation or any State and unless the contrary intention appears, be read and construed as referring to the person for the time being holding or carrying out the duties of that office in the Federation or State, as the case may be.
44 Construction of references to laws—
In any written law a description or citation of a portion of another written law shall, unless a contrary intention appears, be construed as including the word, section or other part mentioned or referred to as forming the beginning and as forming the end of the portion comprised in the description or citation.
46 (Repealed).

TWELFTH SCHEDULE
[Articles 3A, 14, 158]
Provisions of the Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines, 1935
applied as Part of this Constitution

[edit]
PART I
THE PRINCIPLES AND STATE POLICIES OF THE FEDERATION
Provisions of the Constitution Subject Matter
Article II, Section 1 The Federation is a republican state. Sovereignty resides in the people and all government authority emanates from them.
Article II, Section 2 The defense of the Federation is a prime duty of government, and in the fulfillment of this duty all citizens may be required by law to render personal military or civil service.
Article II, Section 3 The Federation renounces war as an instrument of national policy, and adopts the generally accepted principles of international law as part of the law of the Nation.
Article II, Section 4 The natural right and duty of parents in the rearing of the youth for civic efficiency should receive the aid and support of the government.
Article II, Section 5 The promotion of social justice to insure the well-being and economic security of all the people should be the concern of the Federation.
Article II, Section 6 The separation of Church and State shall be inviolable.
Article II, Section 7 The Federation shall pursue an independent foreign policy. In its relation with the other state the paramount consideration shall be the national sovereignty, the territorial integrity, the national interest and the right to self-determination.
Article II, Section 8 The Federation, consistent with the national interest, adopts and pursues a policy of freedom from nuclear weapons in its territory.
Article II, Section 9 The Federation shall promote a just and dynamic social order that will ensure the prosperity and independence of the nations, free the people form poverty through policies that provide adequate social services, promote full employment, a rising standard of living, and the improved quality of life for all.
Article II, Section 10 The Federation shall promote social justice in all phases of national development.
Article II, Section 11 The Federation values the dignity of every human person and guarantees full respect for human rights.
Article II, Section 12 The Federation recognizes the sanctity of family life and shall protect and strengthen the family as a basic, autonomous, social institution. It shall equally protect the life of the mother and the life of the unborn from conception. The natural and primary right and duty of the parents in rearing of the youth into civic efficiency and the development of the moral character shall receive support from the government.
Article II, Section 13 The Federation recognizes the vital role of youth in nation-building and shall protect and promote their physical, moral, spiritual, intellectual and social well-being. It shall inculcate in youth patriotism and nationalism, and shall encourage their involvement in the public and civic affairs.
Article II, Section 14 The Federation recognizes the role of women in nation-building, and shall ensure the fundamental equality before the law of women and men.
Article II, Section 15 The Federation shall protect and promote the right to health of the people and instill health consciousness among them.
Article II, Section 16 The Federation shall promote and advance the right of the people to a balance and healthful ecology in accord with rhythm and harmony of nature.
Article II, Section 17 The Federation shall give priority to education, science and technology, arts, culture and sports to foster patriotism and nationalism, accelerate social progress and promote total human liberation and development.
Article II, Section 18 The Federation shall affirm labor as a primary social economic force. It shall protect the right of the workers and promote their welfare.
Article II, Section 19 The Federation shall develop a self-reliant and independent national economy effectively controlled by Malaysians.
Article II, Section 20 The Federation recognizes the indespensable role of private sector, encourages the private enteprises and provide incentives for needed investments.
Article II, Section 21 The Federation shall promote comprehensive rural development and agrarian reform.
Article II, Section 22 The Federation recognizes and promotes the right of the indigenous cultural communities within the framework of national unity and development.
Article II, Section 23 The Federation shall encourage the non-governmental community based on sectoral organizations that promote the welfare of the nation.
Article II, Section 24 The Federation recognizes the vital role of communication and information in nation-building.
Article II, Section 25 The Federation shall ensure the autonomy of the State and local governments.
Article II, Section 26 The Federation shall guarantee equal access to opportunities for public service, and prohibit political dynasties as may be defined by law.
Article II, Section 27 The Federation shall maintain honesty and integrity in the public service and take positive and effective measures against graft and corruption.
Article II, Section 28 Subject to reasonable conditions prescribed by law, the Federation adopts and implements a policy of full public disclosure of all its transactions involving public interest.

THIRTEENTH SCHEDULE
[Articles 113, 116, 117]
Provisions relating to delimitation of Electoral Districts and Constituencies

[edit]
PART I
DECLARATION OF AND PRINCIPLES RELATING TO THE DELIMITATION OF ELECTORAL DISTRICTS

1. The electoral districts for the election of members to the House of Representatives and the Legislative Assemblies of the States shall, until altered in accordance with the provisions of this Schedule, be the constituencies first used for elections to the House or Assembly, as the case may be, pursuant to this Constitution or the Malaysia Act.

2. The following principles shall as far as possible be taken into account in dividing any unit of review into electoral districts pursuant to the provisions of Articles 116 and 117—

(a) while having regard to the desirability of giving all electors reasonably convenient opportunities of going to the polls, electoral districts ought to be delimited–
(i) so that they do not cross State boundaries; and
(ii) as regarding electoral districts established in the Philippine States, so that they do not cross Provincial boundaries within a State;
(b) regard ought to be had to the administrative facilities available within the electoral districts for the establishment of the necessary registration and polling machines;
(c) the number of electors within each electoral district ought to be approximately equal throughout the unit of review except that–
(i) having regard to the greater difficulty of reaching electors in the country districts and the other disadvantages facing rural constituencies, a measure of weightage for area ought to be given to such electoral districts; and
(ii) as regarding electoral districts established in the Philippine States, each Province ought to include at least one electoral district;
(d) regard ought to be had to the inconveniences attendant on alterations of electoral districts, and to the maintenance of local ties.

3. For the purposes of this Part, the number of electors shall be taken to be as shown on the current electoral rolls.

3A. For the purposes of this Part, in any review of electoral districts for the purposes of election to the House of Representatives–

(a) the Federal Territory of Kuala Lumpur shall be regarded as a State of Malaya;
(b) the Federal Territory of Metropolitan Manila be regarded as a Philippine State; and
(c) the Federal Territory of Labuan shall be regarded as a State.
PART II
PROCEDURE FOR DELIMITATION OF CONSTITUENCIES

4. Where the Election Commission have provisionally determined to make recommendations under Clause (2) of Article 113 affecting any constituency, they shall inform the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Prime Minister accordingly, and shall publish in the Gazette and in at least one newspaper circulating in the constituency a notice stating—

(a) the effect of their proposed recommendations, and (except in a case where they propose to recommend that no alteration be made in respect of the constituency) that a copy of their recommendations is open to inspection at a specified place within the constituency; and
(b) that representations with respect to the proposed recommendations may be made to the Commission within one month after the publication of such notice,
and the Commission shall take into consideration any representations duly made in accordance with any such notice.

5. Where, on the publication of the notice under section 4 of a proposed recommendation of the Election Commission for the alteration of any constituencies, the Commission receive any representation objecting to the proposed recommendation from—

(a) the State Government or any local authority whose area is wholly or partly comprised in the constituencies affected by the recommendation; or
(b) a body of one hundred or more persons whose names are shown on the current electoral rolls of the constituencies in question,
the Commission shall cause a local enquiry to be held in respect of those constituencies.

6. In relation to any enquiry held under section 5 the Election Commission shall have all the powers conferred on Commissioners by the Commissions of Enquiry Act 1950 [Act 119].

7. Where the Election Commission revise any proposed recommendations after publishing a notice thereof under section 4, the Commission shall comply again with that section in relation to the revised recommendations, as if no earlier notice had been published:

Provided that it shall not be necessary to hold more than two local enquiries in respect of any such recommendations.

8. The Election Commission shall, having completed the procedure prescribed by this Part, submit to the Prime Minister a report on constituencies showing—

(a) the constituencies into which they recommend that each unit of review should be divided in order to give effect to the principles set out in section 2; and
(b) the names by which they recommend that those constituencies shall be known,
or stating that in their opinion no alteration is required to be made in order to give effect to the said principles.

9. As soon as may be after the Election Commission have submitted their report to the Prime Minister under section 8, he shall lay the report before the House of Representatives, together (except in a case where the report states that no alteration is required to be made) with the draft of an Order to be made under section 12 for giving effect, with or without modifications, to the recommendations contained in the report.

10. If any draft Order referred to in section 9 is approved by the House of Representatives by resolution supported by the votes of not less than one-half of the total number of members of that House, the Prime Minister shall submit the draft Order to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

11. If a motion for the approval of any draft Order referred to in section 9 is rejected by the House of Representatives, or is withdrawn by leave of the House, or is not supported by the votes of not less than one-half of the total number of members of the House, the Prime Minister may, after such consultation with the Election Commission as he may consider necessary, amend the draft and lay the amended draft before the House of Representatives; and if the draft as so amended is approved by the House by a resolution supported by the votes of not less than one-half of the total number of members of the House, the Prime Minister shall submit the amended draft to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong.

12. Where the draft of an Order is submitted to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong under this Part, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong shall make an Order in the terms of the draft submitted to him, and the Order shall come into force on such date as may be specified therein:

Provided that the coming into force of any such Order shall not affect any election to the House of Representatives or a Legislative Assembly until the next dissolution of Parliament or the Assembly, as the case may be, occurring on or after that date.

ANNEX I
TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS OF MALAYSIA ACT

[edit]

Continuation and effecf of present laws.

73. (1) Subject to the following provisions of this Part of this Act and to any law passed or made on or after Malaysia Day, all present laws shall, on and after Malaysia Day, have effect according to their tenor, and be construed as if this Act had not been passed: Provided that references to the Federation (except in relation to a time before Malaysia Day) shall be construed as references to Malaysia, and expressions importing such a reference shall be construed accordingly. (2) Any present law of the Federation passed or made on or after the day this Act is passed shall extend to any part of Malaysia to which it is expressed to extend; but save as aforesaid no present law of the Federation shall extend to a Borneo State, to Singapore or to a Philippine State, unless or until it is so extended by a law passed or made as aforesaid. (3) Subject to the following provisions of this Part, the present laws of the Borneo States, of Singapore and of the Republic of the Philippines shall, on and after Malaysia Day, be treated as federal laws in so far as they are laws which could not be passed after Malaysia Day by the State Legislature, and otherwise as State laws. (4) This section shall not validate or give effect to any provision contained in the present law of the Federation which is inconsistent with the Constitution, or any provision of present law which is invalid for reasons other than inconsistency with the Constitution. (5) In this Part of this Act " present laws " means the laws of the Federation, of each of the Borneo States, of Singapore and of the Republic of the Philippines passed or made before Malaysia Day, but does not include the Constitution of the Federation, of any of the Borneo States, of Singapore or of any of the Philippine States, or this Act.

Temporary power to modify and apply present laws 74. (1) Subject to the provisions of this section the President may by order make such modifications as appear to him necessary or expedient in consequence of the passing of this Act in any present law relating to matters about which Parliament has power to make laws. (2) Subject to sub-section (3), the power to make orders under sub-section (1) shall include power to extend to a Borneo State or to Singapore any present law of the Federation about any such matter, or to declare to be federal law any present law about any such matter; but except in consequence of the extension to a State of a present law of the Federation, no such order shall modify any State law. (3) An order under sub-section (1) shall not, without the con currence of the Governor, make as respects any State any provision which in an Act of Parliament could not be made or could not come into force without the agreement (however expressed) of a State authority, nor extend to the State any law relating to matters about which the Legislature of the State has power to make laws, nor declare any present law of the State to be federal law, nor modify any State law. (4) In any present law of a Borneo State, of Singapore or of the Republic of the Philippines which is to be treated as State law the President may by order make (in addition to any modifications made under sub section (1)), such modifications as may be requested by the Governor and appear to him to be necessary or expedient in consequence of the passing of this Act. (5) Any Act of Parliament or other law passed for the Federation before Malaysia Day which in the States of Malaya has effect as State law may by order of the President be extended to a Borneo State, Singapore or a Philippine State, with or without modification, so as to have effect as State law in that State; but no law extended to a State under this sub-section without the concurrence of the Governor shall come into operation in the State until adopted by an enactment of the Legislature. (6) Any provision made by an order under this section with respect to any law may be amended or repealed in like manner as that law. (7) Orders under this section may be made at any time after the passing of this Act, and references to the Governor of a State shall be construed accordingly; and as respects the Federation orders under this section may be made to have effect before Malaysia Day. (8) Any power to make orders under this section shall continue until the end of August, 1965, and thereafter till Parliament otherwise provides. (9) Any order under sub-section (1) shall be laid before each House of Parliament; and if either House, at or before the second meeting begun after the order is laid before it, resolves that the order or any provision in it be annulled, the order or that provision of it shall cease to have effect, but without prejudice to anything previously done thereunder. (10) In this section " modification " includes amendment, adaptation and repeal, and any power under this section to make modifications includes power to provide for savings and other transitional provisions.

Succession to property. 75. (1) Subject to sections 78 and 79, any land which on Malaysia Day is vested in a Borneo State, in the State of Singapore or in a Philippine State, and was on the preceding day occupied or used by the government of the United Kingdom, of the Republic of the Philippines or of the State, or by any public authority other than the said governments, for purposes which on Malaysia Day become federal purposes, shall on and after that day be occupied, used, controlled and managed by the Federal Government or, as the case may be, the said public authority, so long as it is required for federal purposes; and that land— (a) shall not be disposed of or used for any purposes other than federal purposes without the consent of the Federal Government; and (b) shall not by virtue of this sub-section be used for federal purposes different from the purposes for which it was used immediately before Malaysia Day without the consent of the government of the State and, where it ceases to be used for those purposes and that consent is not given, shall be offered to the State accordingly. (2) For the purposes of sub-section (1) " federal purposes " includes the provision of government quarters for the holders of federal office or employment ; but that sub-section shall not apply to any land by reason of its having been used by any government for providing government quarters other than those regarded by that government as institutional quarters. (3) Property and assets other than land which immediately before Malaysia Day were used by the government of a Borneo State or of Singapore in maintaining government services shall be apportioned between the Federation and the State with regard to the needs of the Federal and State governments respectively to have the use of the property and assets for Federal or State services, and (subject to any agreement to the contrary between the governments concerned) a corresponding apportionment as at that date shall be made of other assets of the State (but not including land) and of the burden, as between the Federation and the State, of any financial liabilities of the State (including future debt charges in respect of those liabilities) ; and there shall be made all such transfers and payments as may be necessary to give effect to any apportionment under this sub-section. (4) In this section references to the government of a State include the government of the territories comprised therein before Malaysia Day.

Succession to rights, liabilities and obligations. 76. (1) All rights, liabilities and obligations relating to any matter which was immediately before Malaysia Day the responsibility of the government of a Borneo State, of Singapore or of the Republic of the Philippines, but which and on that day becomes the responsibility of the Federal Government, shall on that day devolve upon the Federation, unless otherwise agreed between the Federal Government and the government of the State. (2) This section does not apply to any rights, liabilities or obligations in relation to which section 75 has effect, nor does it have effect to transfer any person from service under the State to service under the Federation or otherwise affect any rights, liabilities or obligations arising from such service or from any contract of employment ; but, subject to that, in this section rights, liabilities and obligations include rights, liabilities and obligations arising from contract or otherwise. (3) The Attorney-General shall on the application of any party interested in any legal proceedings, other than proceedings between the Federation and a State, certify whether any right, liability or obligation is by virtue of this section a right, liability or obligation of the Federation or of a State named in the certificate, and any such certificate shall for the purposes of those proceedings be final and binding on all courts, but shall not operate to prejudice the rights and obligations of the Federation and any State as between themselves. (4) In this section references to the government of a State include the government of the territories comprised therein before Malaysia Day.

Succession as to criminal and civil proceedings. 77. (1) Subject to the provisions of this section, neither any transfer or surrender on Malaysia Day of jurisdiction in relation to a Borneo State, Singapore or the Philippines, nor anything contained in this Act, shall and civil affect any person's liability to be prosecuted and punished for offences proceedings, committed before Malaysia Day, or any proceedings brought or sentence imposed before that day in respect of any offence ; but the powers mentioned in Article 42 of the Constitution (which relates to pardons, etc.) shall in the Borneo States, Singapore and the Philippine States extend to offences committed and sentences imposed before Malaysia Day. (2) In any legal proceedings pending on Malaysia Day (whether civil or criminal) there shall be made such substitution of one party for another as may be necessary to take account of any transfer or surrender on that day of jurisdiction or executive authority in a Borneo State or Singapore or of any transfer under this Act of rights, liabilities or obligations. (3) Any appeal brought on or after Malaysia Day against a decision given in any legal proceedings before that day may be brought by or against the party who should, by virtue of sub-section (2), have been the appellant or respondent if the proceedings had continued after Malaysia Day ; but if it is not so brought, sub-section (2) shall apply to it as it applies to proceedings pending on Malaysia Day. (4) Sub-section (3) shall apply with the necessary modifications to proceedings for leave to appeal as it applies to an appeal. (5) The Attorney-General shall, on the application of a party to any proceedings, certify whether any, and if so what, substitution of one party for another is to be made by virtue of sub-sections (2) to (4) in those proceedings or for the purpose of any appeal arising out of them, and any such certificate shall for purposes of the proceedings or any such appeal, be final and binding on all courts, but shall not operate to prejudice the rights and obligations of the Federation and any State as between themselves.

Succession on future transfers of responsibility. 78. (1) Where in a Borneo State or in Singapore the State government on Malaysia Day retains responsibility for any matter by reason—

(a) of the matter being included for a limited period in the Concurrent List; or (b) of the making of an order under Article 95D of the Constitution empowering the State Legislature to pass laws about the matter ; but the matter would otherwise have become on Malaysia Day the responsibility of the Federal Government, then (subject to federal law) on that matter becoming the responsibility of the Federal Government sections 75 and 76 and sub-sections (2) to (5) of section 77 shall apply in connection with the transfer of responsibility for that matter with the substitution of references to the day on which it does so for the references to Malaysia Day. (2) Where in a Borneo State or in Singapore the State government retains responsibility for any matter under a present law of the State continued in force under section 73, but the matter would otherwise have become on that day the responsibility of the Federal Government, then— (a) the purposes of that law shall not be treated as federal purposes within the meaning of section 75 so long as the State government retains the responsibility thereunder; and (b) sub-section (1) shall apply as it applies where the State government retains responsibility for the reasons there mentioned.

Defence lands. 79. (1) There shall on Malaysia Day vest in the Federal Lands Commissioner (without payment) any land in Singapore which is then leased or agreed to be leased by or on behalf of the State to, the Services' Lands Board for the purposes specified in section 72 of the Singapore (Constitution) Order in Council, 1958. (2) Land vested in the Federal Lands Commissioner by sub section (1) shall vest in him for the term for which it was leased or agreed to be leased to the Services' Lands Board for the purposes there mentioned, and on the terms and conditions on which it was so leased or agreed to be leased, except that— (a) the Federal Lands Commissioner shall take the place of the Services' Lands Board ; and (b) a condition that, subject to sub-section (3) of this section, the land shall be used by the Federal Government for defence purposes (including the purpose of implementing any agreement with the government of the United Kingdom relating to defence) shall take the place of any condition that the land shall be used for the purposes mentioned in sub section (1). (3) For the purpose of implementing any such agreement as afore said, the Federal Government may permit any authority of the government of the United Kingdom to occupy, use, control or manage for defence purposes any land which is to be used for those purposes under sub-section (2) of this section, or sub-section (1) of section 75 ; and where land is vested in the Federal Lands Commissioner under this section, the Federal Lands Commissioner on the direction of the Federal Government may from tune to time grant leases of the land for defence purposes for any term not exceeding at any time thirty years to any person for and on behalf of the government of the United Kingdom. (4) Sub-section (1) of section 75 shall not apply to land in Singapore which immediately before Malaysia Day is occupied for defence purposes under a temporary occupation licence. (5) In this section " the Services' Lands Board " means the corporation incorporated by that name under the Services' Lands Board Ordinance, 1959, of Singapore (No. 8 of 1959).

Temporary financial provisions. 80. (1) As regards Sabah and Sarawak Clause (2) of Article 97 and Articles 109, 110 and 112c of the Constitution shall not have effect financial until the year 1964. (2) Until the year 1964, all revenues accruing or collected in a Borneo State which would apart from this provision be revenues of the Federation shall be revenues of the State, and the burden of all expenditure in respect of federal services in the State (except to the extent that it is incurred by the Federation as additional expenditure) shall be borne by the State.


Chapter 2—State officers

Preservation of pensions.

81. (1) Article 147 of the Constitution shall have effect as if any reference to the public services included the public services before Malaysia Day in the territories comprised in any of the Borneo States, in Singapore or in any of the Philippine States. (2) In relation to awards granted to or in respect of persons who were members of those services that Article shall have effect with the substitution for references to Merdeka Day and to the thirtieth day of August, 1957, of references to Malaysia Day and the sixteenth day of September, 1963. (3) For the purposes of that Article as it applies in relation to the former public services in Sarawak, there shall be treated as having had the force of law on the sixteenth day of September, 1963, any administrative regulations providing for the payment of pensions, gratuities or allowances and any resolution of Council Negri relating to the amount of any pension or allowance then in payment.

Spécial protection for pensions of serving members of State service in Borneo State. 82. (1) No pension, gratuity or other like allowance becoming payable by the Federal Government to or in respect of a serving member of the public service of a Borneo State on or by reference to his ceasing by death, retirement or otherwise to be a member of that service, shall be withheld, suspended or reduced in the exercise of any discretion conferred by the law relating thereto, unless the disciplinary authority concurs in the exercise of the discretion. (2) In this section "serving member" means a member serving as such on Malaysia Day (including a member then on leave pending retirement), and "disciplinary authority" means whichever Commission to which Part X of the Constitution applies or similar disciplinary authority of the State is empowered to exercise disciplinary control in respect of the member in question immediately before he ceases to be a member.

Appeals by serving members of State service in Borneo State, against decisions affecting pension or compensation. 83. (1) Where a decision of the disciplinary authority given with respect to a compensable member of the public service of a Borneo State adversely affects his compensation, or adversely affects any pension, gratuity or other like allowance which is, or but for the decision would be, actually or potentially payable to or in respect of him by the Federal Government, then subject to the provisions of this section he may give notice to the disciplinary authority complaining of the decision and requiring it to be referred to an Appeals Board. (2) Where a decision of a disciplinary authority is referred to an Appeals Board under this section, and the Board consider the decision or its effect was unduly harsh to the complainant having regard to the facts as found by the disciplinary authority and to all the circumstances, the Board shall so declare and shall state how they consider the effect of the decision ought fairly to be adjusted as regards compensation or as regards any such pension, gratuity or allowance as aforesaid ; and in any other case the Board shall confirm the decision. (3) Where under sub-section (2) an Appeals Board declare a decision to have been unduly harsh, the law relating to the compen- sation or to the pension, gratuity or allowance shall have effect as if it provided for the making of the adjustments (if any) proposed by the Appeals Board or such other adjustments not less favourable to the person entitled thereto as may be determined by or on behalf of the government liable after consultation with the disciplinary authority. (4) An Appeals Board under this section shall consist of one member nominated by the Chief Minister of the State, one member nominated by the president or other head of such association representing public officers or professional body as the complainant may select, and a chairman nominated by the other two members or, if they do not agree on a nomination, by the Chief Justice of the High Court in Borneo. (5) An Appeals Board under this section may deal with the refer ence to them without a hearing ; but shall give the complainant and the disciplinary authority an opportunity to make representations and shall have a hearing if either of them requires. (6) At any hearing the complainant and the disciplinary authority shall have a right to be legally represented, and the disciplinary authority, if not legally represented, may be represented by any member or officer of the authority. (7) This section applies to any concurrence of the disciplinary authority under section 82, but save as aforesaid applies only to decisions taken by the disciplinary authority in the exercise of its disciplinary control over members of the public service of the State ; and in relation to a decision of the disciplinary authority given on appeal this section shall apply as if that decision and the decision appealed against together constituted the decision of the disciplinary authority. (8) The personal representatives of a deceased person shall be entitled to require to be referred to an Appeals Board any decision which he might, if alive, have required to be so referred, and shall be entitled to proceed with any reference instituted by him, and references in this section to the complainant shall be construed accordingly. (9) The Chief Ministers of the Borneo States acting jointly may make rules for giving effect to this section, and for regulating refer ences thereunder ; and the rules shall include provision— (a) for ensuring that any compensable member of the State services of a Borneo State or, if he is dead, his personal representative (if any) is given due notice of any decision which he is entitled to have referred to an Appeals Board, and is informed of his rights in that behalf ; and (b) for prescribing the time and manner in which notice is to be given to a disciplinary authority complaining of a decision and requiring it to be referred to an Appeals Board. (10) In this section " compensation " means in relation to Sabah and Sarawak respectively compensation under the North Borneo (Compensation and Retiring Benefits) Order in Council, 1963, and compensation under the Sarawak (Compensation and Retiring Benefits) Order in Council, 1963 ; " compensable member " means a member who for purposes of compensation is an entitled officer within the meaning of the Order relating thereto ; and " disciplinary authority " means a Commission to which Part X of the Constitution applies or any similar disciplinary authority in the State.

Protection of certain members of State service in Borneo State from termination of secondment to federal service. 84. (1) Any arrangements made by the Federal Government for replacing in the public service of the Federation in a Borneo State compensable members of the State service (seconded to the Federal service) by local candidates for appointment or promotion shall be such— (a) that it is for the Service Commission— (i) to decide whether suitably qualified local candidates are available ; and (ii) to select those members of the State service whose secondment is to be terminated ; and (b) that, where any compensable member of the State service was seconded to the Federal service on the post in which he was serving becoming a post in the Federal service, he shall not be selected for the termination of his secondment within his expected period of employment, unless the Service Commission after consultation with the State government is satisfied that suitable employment in the State service will be available for him during the remainder of that period. (2) In paragraph (b) of sub-section (1) the reference to a compensable member's expected period of employment is a reference to ihe minimum period during which he is to be employed in the State service as notified or last notified to him by or on behalf of the State government, but does not include a period so notified after Malaysia Day without the approval of the Federal Government. (3) In this section " compensable member " has the same meaning as in section 83 ; " the Service Commission " means such of the Commissions to which Part X of the Constitution applies as has jurisdiction over the relevant branch of the public service ; and the reference in sub-section (2) to the State government includes the government of the territories comprised in the State before Malaysia Day.

Transfer of Singapore police to federal police force. 85. (1) All persons who immediately before Malaysia Day are members of the police force in Singapore (and are not on leave pending retirement) shall on that day become members of the police force of the Federation with a corresponding rank and in a corresponding capacity. (2) A person who becomes a member of the police force of the Federation under this section— (a) shall be employed on terms and conditions not less favourable than those applicable to him immediately before Malaysia Day ; (b) unless and until he elects to the contrary,— (i) shall not be liable to be transferred without his consent to a post outside Singapore ; but (ii) shall not be eligible for promotion to such a post.

Transfer of Philippine Constabulary to federal police force. 85. (1) All persons who immediately before Malaysia Day are members of the Philippine Constabulary (and are not on leave pending retirement) shall on that day become members of the police force of the Federation with a corresponding rank and in a corresponding capacity. (2) A person who becomes a member of the police force of the Federation under this section— (a) shall be employed on terms and conditions not less favourable than those applicable to him immediately before Malaysia Day; (b) unless and until he elects to the contrary,— (i) shall not be liable to be transferred without his consent to a post outside the Philippine States; but (ii) shall not be eligible for promotion to such a post.

Transfer of Philippine Armed Forces to federal Armed Forces. 85. (1) All persons who immediately before Malaysia Day are members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (and are not on leave pending retirement) shall on that day become members of the Armed Forces of the Federation with a corresponding rank and in a corresponding capacity. (2) A person who becomes a member of the Armed Force of the Federation under this section shall be employed on terms and conditions not less favourable than those applicable to him immediately before Malaysia Day.

Persons assuming federal appointments (effect of secondment; exemption from being sworn). 86. (1) Where in consequence of the passing of this Act a person is seconded to the public service of the Federation by a provision contained in the Constitution of a Borneo State or of Singapore, the effect of the secondment shall be the same as that of a secondment under Article 134 of the Constitution. (2) A person who in consequence of the passing of this Act exemption becomes the holder of any office or employment under the Federation may, until Parliament otherwise provides, perform his functions without taking any oath required hi the case of other holders of that office or employment, if he becomes the holder of it on Malaysia Day under any provision of this Part, or if (by secondment or otherwise) he becomes the holder of it on or after that day by reason of any transfer of responsibility to the Federal Government from a govern ment under which he held a corresponding office or employment.


Chapter 3—The Courts and the Judiciary


Temporary provision as to jurisdiction, etc. of superior courts.

87. (1) Until other provision is made by or under federal law, the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and the jurisdiction of the High Courts, and (so far as may be) the practice and procedure to be followed by those Courts in the exercise of that jurisdiction, shall, subject to the provisions of this section, be the same as that exercised and followed in the like case immediately before Malaysia Day in the Supreme Court of the Federation, the Supreme Court of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei, the Supreme Court of Singapore or the Supreme Court of the Philippines, as the case may be. (2) Until other provision is made by or under federal law, the practice and procedure to be followed by the Supreme Court in the exercise of its original and consultative jurisdiction, and the practice and procedure of other courts in connection therewith, shall, subject to the provisions of this section, be the same as nearly as may be as that followed in the like case immediately before Malaysia Day in and in connection with the exercise of the corresponding jurisdiction by the Supreme Court of the Federation. (3) Until other provision is made by or under federal law— (a) the Federal Court and each of the High Courts shall adopt and use as its seal such seal or stamp as may be approved by the Chief Justice, in the case of the Federal Court, or the Presiding Justice, in the case of a High Court ; and (b) there shall be in and for the purposes of those courts the like offices as there were immediately before Malaysia Day in the case of the said Supreme Courts, and the holders of those offices shall discharge the functions belonging thereto with such modifications as are required to give effect to sub-sections (1) and (2). (4) Sub-sections (1) to (3) shall not affect the powers conferred by section 74, but subject to any order under that section and to the following provisions of this section all present laws affecting the jurisdiction, practice or procedure of the said Supreme Courts shall apply to the Federal Court and the High Courts with such modifications as may be necessary to give effect to sub-sections (1) to (3). (5) Sub-sections (1) to (4) shall not have effect so as to prevent the amendment or revocation of any rules of court in force immediately before Malaysia Day, or the making of new rules of court, under the powers conferre by any present law as applied by sub-section (4) ; but, until other provision is made by federal law, the powers so conferred as regards the practice and procedure of the Federal Court and the practice and procedure of other courts in matters incidental to the exercise of any jurisdiction of the Federal Court, shall be exercised by the Chief Justice after consultation with the Presiding Justices of the High Courts. (6) Until other provision is made by or under federal law, the present law relating to appeals to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong from the Court of Appeal of the Federation, and the practice and procedure followed in connection therewith immediately before Malaysia Day, shall, subject to any order under section 74 and to any new rules of court, apply with any necessary modifications for the purpose of appeals to the President from the Supreme Court. (7) For the purposes of this section the right of audience in a court shall be deemed to be a matter of the practice of the court ; but in the Supreme Court any advocate of a High Court shall have that right, if and so long as it depends on this section. (8) For the purposes of this section the Court of Criminal Appeal in Singapore shall be treated as having been a division of the Court of Appeal. (9) This section has effect subject to Article 66 of the Constitution.

Continuity of subordinate courts and of jurisdiction. 88. (1) Subject to any order under section 74 any subordinate court exercising jurisdiction and functions immediately before Malaysia Day in the territories comprised in a Borneo State, in the State of Singapore or in a Philippine State shall, until federal law otherwise provides, continue to exercise them. (2) The validity on or after Malaysia Day of anything done before that day in or in connection with or with a view to any proceedings in a court in those territories shall not be affected by the court becoming on that day a court of the Federation, but anything so done shall be of the like effect as a thing done by or in relation to the court in the exercise of its jurisdiction as a court of the Federation. (3) Anything done before Malaysia Day in or in connection with or with a view to any proceedings in the Court of Appeal of the Federation, or of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei, or of Singapore, or the Court of Criminal Appeal in Singapore, shall on and after that day be of the like effect as if that court were one and the same court with the Federal Court. (4) Anything done before Malaysia Day in or in connection with or with a view to any proceedings in the High Court of the Federation, or of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei, or of Singapore shall on and after that day be of the like effect as if those High Courts were respectively one and the same court with the High Court in Malaya, the High Court in Borneo and the High Court in Singapore. (5) Where in any court mentioned in sub-section (3) or (4) the hearing of a case has been begun but the case has not finally been disposed of before Malaysia Day, and any judge sitting to deal with the case does not on Malaysia Day become a judge of the court in which the further proceedings in the case are to be had under that sub-section, he shall in relation to the case have the same powers as if he had for the purpose thereof been duly appointed to act as judge of that court. (6) References in this section to things done in connection with proceedings in a court shall include appeals from the court or a judge thereof, and shall apply to appeals to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong ; and any appeal to Her Britannic Majesty from the Supreme Court of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei or from the Supreme Court of Singapore or Court of Criminal Appeal in Singapore, and anything done with a view to such an appeal, shall for the purpose of making it effective under this section be treated as an appeal to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong or, as the case may be, as done with a view to such an appeal. (7) Without prejudice to the generality of sub-sections (3) and (4), all records of the courts there mentioned which are in existence immediately before Malaysia Day shall on and after that day be held, continued and used as if they were records of the corresponding courts there mentioned which are established on Malaysia Day ; and any such record, in so far as it is on that day incomplete with respect to the period before that day, shall be made up as if this Act had not been passed. (8) Any process, pleading, recognizance or other document may be amended to conform with its operation under this section, but shall have effect in accordance with this section whether or not it is so amended.

Continuance in office of existing judges. 89. (1) Subject to the provisions of this section, on Malaysia Day the persons holding office immediately before that day as judges of the Supreme Court of the Federation, of the Supreme Court of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei, of the Supreme Court of Singapore and of the Supreme Court of the Philippines shall become judges of the Federal Court and of the High Courts as follows : (a) the Chief Justice of the Federation shall become Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, the Chief Justice of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei shall become Presiding Justice of the High Court in Borneo, the Chief Justice of Singapore shall become Presiding Justice of the High Court in Singapore and the Chief Justice of the Philippines shall become Presiding Justice of the High Court in the Philippines; (b) the judges of the Court of Appeal of the Federation shall become judges of the Federal Court ; (c) the other judges shall become respectively judges of the High Courts in Malaya, in Borneo, in Singapore and in the Philippines according to the place in which they were judges before Malaysia Day. (2) The first Presiding Justice of the High Court in Malaya shall be appointed from among the persons holding office immediately before Malaysia Day as judges of the Supreme Court of the Federation, and if a judge of the Court of Appeal is appointed, sub-section (1) shall have effect subject to that appointment and to any appointment made in consequence of it. (3) In connection with any such appointment as is mentioned in sub-section (2), any requirement of Article 122A of the Constitution as to consultation with the Chief Justice of the Federal Court or a Presiding Justice may be satisfied by consultation with the person designated or appointed under this Article to hold that office. (4) The term of office under sub-section (1) of a judge who immediately before Malaysia Day held his then office for a fixed term shall not expire before the end of that term ; and, subject to that, the term of office under sub-section (1) of any judge of the Supreme Court of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei who becomes a judge of the High Court in Borneo, or of any judge of the Supreme Court of the Philippines who becomes a judge of the High Court in the Philippines, under that sub-section shall be such fixed period, whether or not expiring after he attains the age of sixty-five, as may have been notified to him before Malaysia Day by or with the authority of the Federal Government. (5) Subject to sub-section (4) a person becoming judge of the Federal Court or a High Court under sub-section (1) (including the Chief Justice or a Presiding Justice) shall hold that office on terms and conditions not less favourable than those applicable to him in the office he holds immediately before Malaysia Day. (6) A person becoming judge of a High Court under sub-section (1) shall not be transferred to another High Court under Article 122c of the Constitution except with his consent. Tempcrary

Temporary provisions as to qualifications of judges.note text 90. (1) In Article 123 of the Constitution, in relation to a period before Malaysia Day— (a) the reference in paragraph (b) to an advocate of the Federal Court and High Courts or of any of those courts shall be construed as a reference to an advocate of the Supreme Court of the Federation, of the Supreme Court of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei or of the Supreme Court of Singapore; and (b) the reference to the legal service of a State shall include a reference to the judicial and legal branch of the public service of the Government of North Borneo, Sarawak or Singapore. (2) A person who immediately before Merdeka Day was a member of the judicial and legal service of the Federation, or immediately before Malaysia Day was a member of the judicial and legal branch of the public service of Brunei, North Borneo, Sarawak or Singapore, and who, if he were a citizen, would be qualified for appointment as a judge of the Federal Court or a High Court, shall be so qualified notwithstanding that he is not a citizen. (3) A person may be appointed to be a judge of the Federal Court or of a High Court notwithstanding that he is not qualified for appointment under Article 123 of the Constitution if— (a) the appointment is made within ten years of Merdeka Day or, in the case of an appointment to the High Court in Borneo or in Singapore, within ten years of Malaysia Day ; and (b) he is and has been for not less than five years qualified to practise as an advocate of a court in any Commonwealth country having unlimited jurisdiction in civil or criminal matters. (4) A person appointed a judge by virtue of sub-section (3) may be appointed for a fixed period, whether or not expiring after he attains the age of sixty-five. (5) Where a person who is not a citizen is required by the Constitution to take an oath on becoming Lord President of the Federal Court or on becoming a judge of the Federal Court or of a High Court, the words " and allegiance " shall be omitted from the oath.

Pensions of certain judges from Borneo States. 91. Where a judge of the Supreme Court of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei, or a compensable member of the State service of a Borneo State (within the meaning of section 83) becomes a judge of the Federal Court or of a High Court, then— (a) for the purposes of any compensation (within the meaning of that section), or pension, gratuity or other like allowance, payable to or in respect of him, he shall be treated as if he had while serving as a Judge of the Federal Court or of a High Court remained a member of the same service as immediately before Malaysia Day ; and (b) no such pension, gratuity or allowance becoming payable by the Federal Government on or by reference to his ceasing (whether by death or retirement) to be such a judge shall be withheld, suspended or reduced in the exercise of any discretion conferred by the law relating thereto.

Existing officers of Supreme Courts and judges of subordinatecourts. 92. (1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), all persons who immediately before Malaysia Day hold any office in the Supreme Court of the Federation (not being judges of the Court) and, if seconded to the public service of the Federation, all persons who immediately judges of before that day hold any office hi the Supreme Court of Sarawak, Noith Borneo and Brunei or in the Supreme Court of Singapore or any judicial office in the territories comprised in a Borneo State or Singapore before Malaysia Day (not being judges of the Supreme Court) shall on that day continue in the like offices, subject to any appointment of any of them to another office. (2) Sub-section (1) shall not apply to offices in the Court of Appeal in those Supreme Courts ; but a person who under that sub section becomes on Malaysia Day an officer of a High Court shall, unless or until other provision is made under this Part or by or under federal law, discharge in that office the like functions, as nearly as may be, in relation to the Federal Court as immediately before that day he discharged in any office held by him in a Court of Appeal, as if that office had immediately before Malaysia Day been amalgamated with his office in the High Court. (3) This section shall apply to an office in a Supreme Court as such as if it had been an office in the High Court.


Chapter 4—President, Parliament and Legislative Assemblies

Continuance in office of existing judges. 89. (1) Subject to the provisions of this section, on Malaysia Day the persons holding office immediately before that day as President and Vice-President of the Philippines shall respectively become President and Vice-President of Malaysia. (2) Any power vested in the President of Malaysia may be exercised before Malaysia Day by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong so as to enable the amended Constitution to function effectively after Malaysia Day.

Existing members of Senate. 93. (1) As from Malaysia Day and until the thirtieth day of December, 1965, the Senate shall consist of–

(a) the existing members of the Senate of the Federation;
(b) the existing members of the Senate of the Philippines;
(c) two members for the State of Brunei who shall be appointed by the Sultan thereof;
(d) two members for each of the States of Sabah, Sarawak, and Singapore who shall be elected in like manner as the elected member of the Senate of the Federation.
(2) The legal provisions by which the existing members of the Senate of the Federation, or of the Senate of the Philippines, as the case may be, shall continue to apply to them after Malaysia Day.
(3) In each of the States of Sabah and Sarawak and in Singapore the Governor shall, without the necessity for any notice under section 1 of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution as in force immediately before Malaysia Day, require the Legislative Assembly to elect Senators as soon as may be after Malaysia Day.

House of Representatives and Legislative Assemblies (elections in Borneo States). 94. (1) In the Borneo States there shall be a period of indirect elections to the House of Representatives and to the Legislative Assembly; and Part VIII of the Constitution shall not have effect for the purpose of any election during that period to that House or Assembly. (2) The period of indirect elections in any State shall be, for elections to the House of Representatives, the period up to the ordinary elections held in 1969 or, for elections to the Legislative Assembly, the first dissolution of that Assembly occurring after the end of August, 1968: Provided that with the concurrence of the Governor of a State the President may by order direct that this sub-section shall have effect in relation to the State with the substitution of an earlier date. (3) During the period of indirect elections in a State the members of the House of Representatives from the State shall be elected by the Legislative Assembly in accordance with such procedure as may be prescribed by order of the Governor made with the concurrence of the President; and the order may either require the elections to be made from among members of the Assembly or permit others to be elected. (4) During the period of indirect elections in any State elected members of the Legislative Assembly shall be elected as may be provided by federal or State law. (5) In each of the Borneo States the Legislative Assembly shall, without any writ or other notification, proceed to the first election of members of the House of Representatives as soon as may be after Malaysia Day. (6) If any question arises whether a member of the House of Representatives from a Borneo State has been duly elected during the period of indirect elections in the State, the decision of the House shall be taken and shall be final.

House of Representatives and Legislative Assembly (elections in Singapore). 95. (1) Subject to subsection (2), Part VIII of the Constitution shall not have effect for the purpose of elections of members of the House of Representatives from Singapore until the second general election to that House held after Malaysia Day, and so long as this subsection applies to those elections those members shall, subject to subsection (2), be elected as may be provided by any law passed by the Legislature of Singapore with the concurrence of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong (including any law so passed before Malaysia Day), and the period for which they are elected should be the period until the second dissolution of Parliament after Malaysia Day. (2) Except as regards the first elections of members of the House of Representatives from Singapore, Article 119 of the Constitution, together with Article 30A, shall apply in relation to elections to which subsection (1) applies, but not so as to prevent use being made of electoral rolls in force immediately before Malaysia Day pending the revision of these rolls or the preparation of new ones according to law ; and except as regards the said first elections that subsection shall have effect subject to federal law (including any federal law applied in relation to those elections by an order under section 74 of this Act). (3) Subject to subsection (5), Part VIII of the Constitution shall also not have effect for the purpose of elections to the Legislative Assembly of Singapore until the first general election to that Assembly held after such date (not being earlier than five years from Malaysia Day) as may be provided by Act of Parliament passed with the concurrence of the Governor. (4) So long as sub-section (3) applies to elections to the Legislative Assembly of Singapore, the members of the Assembly shall, subject to subsection (5), be elected as may be provided by federal or State law ; and subject to any such law, on subsection (3) ceasing to apply the constituencies for those elections as then existing shall continue until altered on a review under Article 113 of the Constitution, and shall be reviewed when the federal constituencies are reviewed in accordance with that Article. (5) Article 119 of the Constitution, together with Article 30A, shall apply in relation to elections to which subsection (3) applies, but not so as to prevent use being made for the purpose of those elections of electoral rolls in force immediately before Malaysia Day, pending the revision of those rolls or the preparation of new ones according to law ; and so long as sub-section (3) applies to elections to the Legislative Assembly, Article 119 shall not invalidate or prohibit any restrictions on a person's right to vote at those elections which may be imposed by State law by reason of his failure to vote at such an election or by reason of any act or conduct showing adherence to a country or territory outside Malaysia.

First delimitation of constituencies. 96. (1)The constituencies in each o£ the Borneo States for the first elections to the House of Representatives or the Legislative Assembly after the end of the period of indirect elections, and the constituencies in Singapore for the first elections to the House of Representatives to which sub-section (1) of section 95 does not apply, shall be delimited by order of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong made in accordance with this section. (2) The Election Commission, at such time as may be notified to them on behalf of the Federal Government, shall take into consideration the division of the State into constituencies and, within such period as may be so notified, shall submit to the Prime Minister a report showing— (a) the constituencies into which they recommend the State should be divided in order to give effect to the principles set out in section 2 of the Thirteenth Schedule to the Constitution ; and (b) the names by which they recommend that those constituencies should be known. (3) In applying the said section 2 for the purpose of that report the Election Commission shall estimate the number of electors from such information as is reasonably available to them, and section 3 of the said Thirteenth Schedule (which directs the number of electors to be taken to be as shown on the current electoral rolls) shall not apply for that purpose. (4) Before making their report to the Prime Minister on the State, the Election Commission shall publish in the Gazette and in at least one newspaper circulating in the State, and in any other manner they think necessary to secure that it may become generally known among persons interested, a notice stating— (a) the effect of their proposed recommendations, and that a copy of those recommendations is open to inspection at a specified place in each of the proposed constituencies ; and (b) that representations with respect to the proposed recommendations may be made to the Commission within one month after the publication of the notice ; and the Commission shall take into consideration any representations duly made in accordance with any such notice. (5) As soon as may be after the Election Commission have submitted their report on the State to the Prime Minister, he shall lay the report before the House of Representatives. (6) Together with the report there shall be laid before the House the draft of an order for giving effect with or without modifications to the recommendations contained in the report, and a draft order for that purpose shall not be submitted to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong until the House has been given the opportunity to debate the report on a motion relating to such an order. (7) If, on such a motion, the draft order is approved by resolution of the House, it shall be submitted to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong in the form in which it is so approved. (8) If, on such a motion, the draft order is not so approved, then unless the Prime Minister thinks fit to lay a further draft before the House (in which event this and the preceding sub-section shall apply to that draft as they apply to the draft first laid before the House), the draft order shall be submitted to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong with such modifications (if any) as the Prime Minister thinks fit having regard to the debate on the draft order. (9) Before a draft order is submitted to the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, under sub-section (8) or a further draft laid instead before the House, the Prime Minister shall have such consultation with the Election Commission as he may consider necessary.