Government of Sabah

Agency executive
  • Safar Untong, State Secretary
Parent agencyGovernment of MalaysiaChild agency
  • 10 ministries
Websitewww.sabah.gov.my

The Sabah State Government is an authority governing Sabah, one of Borneo states of Malaysia, based in Kota Kinabalu, the state capital. The state government adheres to and is created by both the Federal Constitution of Malaysia, the supreme law of Malaysia, and the Constitution of the State of Sabah, the supreme law of the State.

The state government has only two branches: executive and legislative. Sabah has no judiciary branch due to the federalisation of court system in Malaysia. Although Sabah has jurisdictions towards Sharia and Native Courts (and their respective laws),[2][3] both courts are still considered a part of the state executive branch.

Legislative

The state legislature consists of only a unicameral house called the State Legislative Assembly. All 60 members of the Assembly are elected from single-member districts by universal adult suffrage. The Assembly follows a multi-party system and the governing body is elected through a first-past-the-post system. The State may appoint up to six nominated members of the Assembly based on conditions provided by the State Constitution.

The Assembly has a maximum mandate of five years by law. The Yang di-Pertua Negeri may dissolve the state legislature at any time and usually does so upon the advice of the Chief Minister.

Executive

Cabinet

Executive power is vested in the Cabinet led by the Chief Minister. The State Constitution stipulates that the Chief Minister must be a member of the State Legislative Assembly who, in the opinion of the Yang di-Pertua Negeri, commands a majority in the State Legislative Assembly. The Cabinet is chosen among members of the State Legislative Assembly and is responsible to that body. The executive branch of the government consists of the Chief Minister as the head of the government, followed by the various ministers of the Cabinet.

Ministries and agencies

Since 5 October 2022, Sabah State Government comprises the following ministries, which subsequently divided to following agencies:[4]

Ministry State agencies Additional charge of Federal matters[5]
Chief Minister's Department State departments:
  • Chief Minister's Department
    • State Palace
    • Chief Minister's Office
    • Office of the State Secretary
    • Office of the Deputy State Secretary (Administration)
    • Office of the Deputy State Secretary (Development)
    • Cabinet and Policy Division Archived 2017-01-15 at the Wayback Machine (BKD)
    • Community Development Leaders' Unit (UPPM)
    • Government Printing Department (JCK)
    • Internal Affairs and Research Office (PHEDNP)
    • Management and Finance Division (BPK)
    • Natural Resources Office (PHB)
    • Press and Publications Office (PAP)
    • Protocol and Ceremony Division (BIP)
    • Sabah State Integrity Unit
    • Sabah State Liaison Office, Kuala Lumpur (PPNSKL)
  • State Legislative Assembly (Website)
  • State Public Service Commission (SPANS)
  • State Attorney-General's Chambers (SAGC)
  • Kota Kinabalu City Hall (DBKK) (Website)
  • Sabah Forestry Department Archived 2014-01-15 at the Wayback Machine
  • Sabah Lands and Surveys Department (JTU)
  • Sabah State Archives Department
  • Sabah State Public Service Department (JPAN)
  • State Economic Planning Unit (UPEN)

State statutory bodies:

State-owned companies:

  • Institute for Development Studies (IDS)
  • MLGH (Sabah) Sdn. Bhd.
  • Sabah Energy Corporation Sdn. Bhd.
  • Sabah Forest Industries Sdn. Bhd. (SFI)
  • Sawit Kinabalu Bhd.
  • Communication and multimedia
  • Defence
  • Foreign affairs
  • Internal security
  • Other Federal matters
Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries State departments:
  • Department of Fisheries (DOF)
  • Department of Irrigation and Drainage (DID)
  • Department of Veterinary Services (DVS)

State statutory bodies:

  • Rural Development Corporation (KPD)
  • Sabah Fishermen and Fishery Development Corporation (KO-NELAYAN)
  • Sabah Rubber Industry Board (LIGS)
None
Ministry of Community Development and People's Wellbeing State departments:
  • Department of Women Affairs (JHEWA)
  • Department of General Welfare Service (JPKA)

State statutory bodies:

  • Sabah Social Service Council (MPMS)
  • Consumer affairs
  • Unity and national integration
  • Health
Ministry of Finance State departments:
  • State Treasurer's Department[permanent dead link] (JBN)

State statutory bodies:

  • Sabah Credit Corporation (SCC)

State-owned companies:

  • Borneo Development Corporation (Sabah) Sdn. Bhd. (BDC)
  • Borneo Housing Mortgage Finance Bhd. (BHMF)
  • Desa Group of Companies
  • Koperasi Jelata Sabah Bhd. (KOJASA)
  • Permodalan Bumiputra Sabah Bhd. Archived 2020-11-17 at the Wayback Machine (PBSB)
  • Progressive Insurance Bhd.
  • Sabah Air Aviation Sdn. Bhd. (Website)
  • Sabah Development Bank Bhd. (SDB)
  • Saham Sabah Bhd. (SSB)
  • Warisan Harta Sabah Sdn. Bhd. (WHSSB)
  • Yayasan Bumiputera Sabah Bhd. (YBS)
  • Yayasan Usaha Maju (YUM)
None
Ministry of Industrial Development State departments:
  • Department of Industrial Development and Research (DIDR)

State statutory boards:

  • Sabah Economic Development Corporation (SEDCO)

State-owned companies:

  • Invest Sabah
  • Kota Kinabalu Industrial Park Sdn. Bhd. (KKIP)
  • POIC Sabah Sdn. Bhd.
  • Sabah Oil and Gas Development Corporation Sdn. Bhd. (SOGDC)
None
Ministry of Local Government and Housing State departments:
  • Department of Native Affairs (JHEAN)
  • Department of Town and Country Planning Archived 2013-01-15 at the Wayback Machine (JPBW)

State statutory bodies:

None
Ministry of Rural Development State departments: None
Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation([6]) State departments:
  • State Computer Services Department (JPKN)
  • Human Resources Development Department (JPSM)
  • Sabah State Library ([7]) (PNS)

State-owned companies:

  • Sabah Net Sdn. Bhd. Archived 2018-11-25 at the Wayback Machine
  • Sabah Skills and Technology Centre[permanent dead link] (SSTC)
  • Sabah Creative Economy and Innovation Centre (SCENIC)
None
Ministry of Special Duties and Coordination State departments:
  • Office of the State Mufti (PMNS)
  • Sabah State Islamic Affairs Department (JHEAINS)
  • Sabah State Syariah Judiciary Department (JKSNS)

State statutory bodies:

  • Sabah State Baitulmal Corporation (PBNS)
  • Sabah State Islamic Affairs Council (MUIS)
  • Education
  • Higher education
Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Environment State departments:

State statutory boards:

  • Sabah Parks (Website)
  • Sabah Cultural Board (LKNS)
  • Sabah Tourism Board (STB)
None
Ministry of Works State departments:
  • Ports and Harbours Department (JPDS)
  • Public Works Department (JKR)
  • State Water Department (JANS)
  • State Railway Department (Website)
  • State Sewerage Department (JPP Sabah)

State statutory boards:

  • Sabah Ports Authority (LPPS)
None
Ministry of Youth and Sports State statutory bodies:
  • Sabah State Sports Board (LSNS)
  • Sabah State Sports Council[permanent dead link] (MSN Sabah)

State-owned companies:

  • Koperasi Serbaguna SANYA Bhd. Archived 2016-12-21 at the Wayback Machine (KOSAN)
None

Head of government

The Chief Minister of Sabah (Malay: Ketua Menteri Sabah) is the indirectly elected head of government of Sabah. He is officially appointed by the Yang di-Pertua Negeri (Governor), who in His Excellency's judgement is likely to command the confidence of the majority of the members of State Legislative Assembly. He heads the State Cabinet, whose members are appointed by the Yang di-Pertua Negara on the advice of the Chief Minister. The Chief Minister and his Cabinet shall be collectively responsible to State Legislative Assembly. The Chief Minister's Department is the body and ministry in which the Chief Minister exercises its functions and powers.

References

  1. ^ Lajius, Leolerry (17 November 2017). "Sabah peruntukkan RM4,104.35 juta untuk Bajet Negeri 2018". Sayang Sabah (in Malay). Retrieved 14 December 2017.
  2. ^ Both courts are under the jurisdiction of the Minister of State for Law and Native Affairs.
  3. ^ Federal Constitution, Ninth Schedule, List IIA, Item 13.
  4. ^ "Senarai Jabatan dan Agensi Kerajaan Negeri". Sabah State Government. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  5. ^ "Penugasan Urusan Kerajaan: Pembahagian Portfolio-portfolio bagi Ahli-ahli Jemaah Menteri" (PDF). Warta Kerajaan Negeri Sabah (in Malay). 2020-11-12. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
  6. ^ "Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation of Sabah".
  7. ^ Sabah State Library
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