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The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Malay: Kementerian Luar Negeri; Jawi: كمنترين لوار نڬري ), abbreviated KLN, is a ministry of the Government of Malaysia that is responsible for foreign affairs, Malaysian diaspora, foreigners in Malaysia, diplomacy, foreign relations, counter terrorism, bilateral affairs, multilateral affairs, ASEAN, international protocol, consular services ...
Malaysia's foreign ministry started in 1956 - a year before the country's independence - when Malaysia's Father of Independence established its offices at the Sultan Abdul Samad Building in Kuala Lumpur. Then, it was one of only four ministries established by the late Tunku Abdul Rahman. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs started with a staff of ...
Department of Industrial Relations (JPP) Department of Labour, Peninsular Malaysia (JTKSM) Department of Manpower (JTM) Department of Occupational Safety and Health (JKKP) Department of Skills Development (JPK) Department of Trade Union Affairs (JHEKS) Human Resources Development Corporation** (HRD Corp.) Industrial Courts (MP)
In 1974, Malaysia established diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China, leading to the closure of the Malaysian Consulate-General in Taipei. [3] An office of Malaysia Airlines in Taipei represented Malaysia's interests in Taiwan until 1982. [4]
See Malaysia–Turkey relations. Malaysia has an embassy in Ankara. Turkey has an embassy in Kuala Lumpur. Both countries are members of D-8, OIC and WTO. Trade volume between the two countries was US$1.70 billion in 2015 (Malaysian exports/imports: 1.34/0.36 billion USD). [199] Yunus Emre Institute has a local headquarters in Kuala Lumpur.
It is among four new bipartisan parliamentary select committees announced by the Minister in the Prime Minister's Department in charge of legal affairs, Liew Vui Keong, on 17 October 2019 in an effort to improve the institutional system.
This is a list of diplomatic missions in Malaysia. At present, the capital city of Kuala Lumpur hosts 97 embassies and high commissions, while Putrajaya , the new federal administrative center, is host to one high commission.
This category includes ministries, departments, agencies, and crown corporations created by the government or Parliament of Malaysia by statute or regulation. It does not include the Yang di-Pertuan Agong (head of state), the Parliament of Malaysia (legislative body), or the federal courts of Malaysia (see Judiciary of Malaysia).