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Tanjung Sepat (Jawi: تنجوڠ سڤات; Chinese: 丹绒士拔) is a town in Kuala Langat District, Selangor, Malaysia. It is on the Strait of Malacca . It is administered by the Zone 24 of the Kuala Langat Municipal Council .
Tanjung Sepat or better known as Pantai Sepat is a typical Malay fishing village [1] located in Kuantan District, Pahang, Malaysia. From Kuantan, it is accessible via Jalan Abu Bakar Federal Route 183 and is an alternative way to the royal town of Pekan .
Tanjong Sepat is a state constituency in Selangor, Malaysia, that has been represented in the Selangor State Legislative Assembly since 2004.. The state constituency was created in the 2003 redistribution and is mandated to return a single member to the Selangor State Legislative Assembly under the first past the post voting system.
Tanjung Sepat may refer to: Tanjung Sepat, Pahang in Malaysia; Tanjung Sepat, Selangor in Malaysia Tanjong Sepat (state constituency) of Selangor, Malaysia
Established on January 1, 1977, under the Local Government Act 1976 by a combination of 3 Local Councils: Sg. Jarom, Tanjung Sepat Local Council, Kuala Langat Municipal Board, Kuala Langat Sanitary Board. [1] Early establishment 3.7 square miles (9.6 km), 2001 increased to 62,294 km 2 and 2006 increased to 857.70 km 2 including 3 nautical miles.
Borhan bin Aman Shah (born 14 May 1962) is a Malaysian politician who has served as Member of the Selangor State Executive Council (EXCO) in the Pakatan Harapan (PH) state administration under Menteri Besar Amirudin Shari since September 2020 and Member of the Selangor State Legislative Assembly (MLA) for Tanjong Sepat since May 2018.
Sepat may refer to: the Ancient Egyptian name for the regional divisions of the country. The Greek term nomos has been used in its place since the Ptolemaic period; Typhoon Sepat (disambiguation), the name of various weather disturbances in the north Pacific Ocean; Tanjung Sepat, Pahang, a town in Pahang in Malaysia
Pahang's long, coastline has sandy beaches like Cherating, Teluk Cempedak, Beserah, Batu Hitam and Tanjung Sepat. Also located along the coastal plain, is a 32 km 2 (12 sq mi) wide expanse of alluvial soil that includes the deltas and estuarine plains of the Kuantan, Pahang, Rompin, Endau, and Mersing Rivers. [6]