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The Bankruptcy Act 1967, in its current form (1 January 2006), consists of 8 Parts containing 139 sections and 3 schedules (including 7 amendments).
Suruhanjaya Pilihanraya Malaysia. (1980). Penyata pilihanraya umum Dewan Rakyat dan dewan-dewan undangan Negeri kecuali dewan-dewan undangan negeri Kelantan, Sabah dan Sarawak, 1978. Kuala Lumpur: Jabatan Percetakan Negara. Who's who in Malaysia and guide to Singapore. (1978). Kuala Lumpur.
Membangun demokrasi: Pilihanraya di Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur: Karya Bistari. Ibnu, H. (1993). PAS kuasai Malaysia?: 1950-2000 sejarah kebangkitan dan masa depan. Kuala Lumpur: GG Edar. Ismail, K. (1978). The Politics of Accommodation: An Analysis of the 1978 Malaysian General Election. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.
The Prime Minister's Department (Malay: Jabatan Perdana Menteri (JPM); Jawi: جابتن ڤردان منتري) is a federal government ministry in Malaysia.Its objective is "determining the services of all divisions are implemented according to policy, legislation / regulations and current guidelines".
Government of Malaysia: Headquarters: Block C1-C3, Complex C, Federal Government Administrative Centre, 62510 Federal Territory of Putrajaya: Motto: Driving Public Service Transformation (Peneraju Transformasi Perkhidmatan Awam) Employees: 4,866 (2017) Annual budget: MYR 1,623,931,100 (2020) Department executive
The National Audit Department (Malay: Jabatan Audit Negara; Jawi: جابتن اءوديت نڬارا ) is an independent government agency in Malaysia that is responsible for carrying out the audits on the accounts of Federal Government, State Government and Federal Statutory Bodies as well as the activities of the Ministry/Department/Agency and Companies under the Federal and State Government.
In accounting, insolvency is the state of being unable to pay the debts, by a person or company (), at maturity; those in a state of insolvency are said to be insolvent. ...
Malaysia’s bureaucracy is one of the biggest in the world, with 1.7 million civil servants to a population of 32 million, a ratio of 4.5% compared with Singapore’s ratio of 1.5% civil servants to total population, Hong Kong’s 2.3% and Taiwan’s ratio of 2.3%. [3]