The document also defines the rights and responsibilities of the federal government, the member states of the federation and the citizens and their relations to each other.
Contents
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1 History
2 Organisation
3 Fundamental Liberties
3.1 Article 5 – Right to Life and Liberty
3.2 Article 6 – No Slavery
3.3 Article 7 – No Retrospective Criminal Laws or Increases in Punishment and no Repetition of Criminal Trials
3.4 Article 8 – Equality
3.5 Article 9 – Prohibition of Banishment and Freedom of Movement
3.6 Article 10 – Freedom of Speech, Assembly and Association
3.6.1 Laws on freedom of assembly
3.6.2 Laws on freedom of speech
3.6.3 Freedom of association
3.7 Article 11 – Freedom of religion
3.8 Article 12 – Rights in respect of education
3.9 Article 13 – Rights to property
4 Federal and state relationship
4.1 Article 71 – State sovereignty and state constitutions
4.2 Articles 73 – 79 legislative powers
4.2.1 Federal, state and concurrent legislative lists
4.2.2 State Islamic laws and Syariah courts
5 Other articles
5.1 Article 3 – Islam
5.2 Article 32 – The Head of State
5.3 Articles
References: 14 External links History[edit] Main article: History of the Malaysian Constitution Constitutional Conference: A constitutional conference was held in London from 18 January to 6 February 1956 attended by a delegation from the Federation of Malaya, consisting of four representatives of the Rulers, the Chief Minister of the Federation (Tunku Abdul Rahman) and three other ministers, and also by the British High Commissioner in Malaya and his advisers.[5] Reid Commission: The conference proposed the appointment of a commission to devise a constitution for a fully self-governing and independent Federation of Malaya.[6] This proposal was accepted by Queen Elizabeth II and the Malay Rulers. Accordingly, pursuant to such agreement, the Reid Commission, consisting of constitutional experts from fellow Commonwealth countries and headed by Lord (William) Reid, a distinguished Lord-of-Appeal-in-Ordinary, was appointed to make recommendations for a suitable constitution. The report of the Commission was completed on 11 February 1957. The report was then examined by a working party appointed by the British Government, the Conference of Rulers and the Government of the Federation of Malaya and the Federal Constitution was enacted on the basis of its recommendations.[7] Constitution: The Constitution came into force on 27 August 1957 but formal independence was only achieved on 31 August.[8] This constitution was amended in 1963 to admit Sabah, Sarawak and Singapore as additional member states of the Federation and to make the agreed changes to the constitution that were set out in the Malaysia Agreement, which included changing the name of the Federation to "Malaysia". Thus, legally speaking, the establishment of Malaysia did not create a new nation as such but was simply the addition of new member states to the Federation created by the 1957 constitution, with a change of name.[9]