Maps Of Singapore

Singapore

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Singapore (Malay: Singapura; Chinese: 新加坡; pinyin: Xīnjiāpō; Tamil: சிங்கப்பூர், Ciŋkappūr), officially the Republic of Singapore (Malay: Republik Singapura; Chinese: 新加坡共和国; pinyin: Xīnjiāpō Gònghéguó; Tamil: சிங்கப்பூர் குடியரசு, Ciŋkappūr Kudiyarasu), is an island nation located at the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula. It lies 137 kilometres (85 mi) north of the Equator, south of the Malaysian state of Johor and north of Indonesia’s Riau Islands. At 704.0 km² (272 sq mi), it is one of the few remaining city-states in the world and the smallest country in Southeast Asia.

When the main island was colonized by the British East India Company in 1819, it contained a fishing village sparsely populated by indigenous Malays and Orang Lauts at the mouth of the Singapore River. The British used the position as a strategic trading outpost along the spice route.[1] It became one of the most important commercial and military centres of the British Empire and the site, in 1942, of what Winston Churchill called “Britain’s biggest defeat” at the hands of the Japanese.[citation needed] Occupied by the Japanese Empire during World War II, it reverted to British rule in 1945 and was later part of the merger which established Malaysia in 1963. Less than two years later it left the federation and became an independent republic on 9 August 1965. The new republic was admitted to the United Nations on September 21 that same year.

Since independence, Singapore has continued and accelerated the increase in the standard of living started under British rule in the 1950s. Foreign investment and government-led island-wide industrialization have created a modern economy based on electronics and manufacturing and featuring entrepôt and financial trade centred on the nation’s strategic location. Singapore is the 17th wealthiest country in the world in terms of GDP per capita.[2] The geographically small nation has a foreign reserve of S$222 billion (US$147 billion).[3]

The Constitution of the Republic of Singapore established the city-state’s political system as a representative democracy, while the country is recognized as a parliamentary republic.[4] The People’s Action Party (PAP) dominates the political process and has won control of Parliament in every election since self-government in 1959.[5]


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