Lawas
Lawas is a small town and the capital of Lawas District, Limbang Division, Sarawak, Malaysia. This district area is 3,811.90 square kilometres, and population was 46,200. It is 1,200 km from the state capital, Kuching and 200 km from the capital city of Sabah, Kota Kinabalu.
Etymology
There are several versions of the origin of the name "Lawas". It reportedly came from the Malay word luas which means "spacious". During earlier times, people tended to settle down in spacious areas and thus the town was born. In another version of the story, there was once a group of merchants who were attacked and chased by the pirates at the mouth of the Lawas river. The merchants managed to hid themselves in the middle of the jungle and the pirates could not find them. Feelling relieved and secure, the merchants returned to the sea. In the local dialect, "Lawas" means "relief, safe, and secure".History
On 7 September 1901, the British North Borneo Company had obtained the administrative rights of the Lawas river from Brunei Sultanate in order to stem the smuggling of weapons that worked against the BNBC government in North Borneo and the trading of slaves in the interior of the Lawas district. There were two types of rights exist in the Brunei administrative system: sungai kerajaan and sungai tulin. Government control on the river includes the rights to all the minerals mined from the river and the right to interfere if there is any political disturbances around the river. Private ownership of the river functioned like a private inheritance which includes the right collect taxes from the residents living near the river.At that time, Pengiran Abu Bakar and Pengiran Tajudin had the private ownership of the Lawas river. They refused to surrender their private ownerships to BNBC but keen to sell their rights to Kingdom of Sarawak. When the British Consul at Labuan decided that BNBC should take over the Lawas river by force, Pengiran Abu Bakar quickly invited Rajah Charles Brooke from Kingdom of Sarawak to govern the Lawas river. BNBC initially was unhappy with the Brooke involvement in the administration of Lawas river. However, in November 1904, BNBC decided the sell their administrative right to Brooke in view of private owners unwilling to cooperate with BNBC; taking Lawas river by force will only spark more rebellion against BNBC and drain the BNBC cash reserves. On 19 January 1905, an agreement was signed between BNBC and Rajah Charles Brooke which saw the official handover of Lawas river to the Brooke government in exchange of 5000 pounds and several administrative areas around Brunei bay to BNBC. An agreement was later reached with the private owners to sell Lawas river to the Brooke government with reparation of 6,000 dollars per year to the private owners.
Government
Lawas is part of the Lawas District, which is part of the Limbang Division, which is part of Sarawak, Malaysia.Climate
Lawas has a tropical rainforest climate with heavy to very heavy rainfall year-round.Demographics
Lawas is made up of a population comprising Lun Bawang, Brunei Malay, Kedayan, and Chinese. The main spoken language is Brunei Malay, Kedayan, Lun Bawang and Hokkien.Economy
As with Limbang, the town is a busy transit point between Sarawak, Sabah, and Brunei.Timber and agriculture are the mainstays of the economy. The highland area known as Ba'Kelalan has been experimenting with the cultivation of apples. In addition, the tourism industry is being developed in Ba'Kelalan. However, these plans have been met with controversy due to the probable effects on several traditional tribal villages. Plans to develop small and middle scale industries in Lawas have been proposed by the state government.
At this time much of the land in Lawas, Sundar and Trusan has been transformed from padi fields into oil palm plantations. Lawas is also known as the producer of smoked fish called 'Tahai' in local dialect. One of the villages that produces 'Tahai' commercially is Kampung Awat-Awat in the Sundar sub-district.
Transport
Road
Lawas, by virtue of its geographical location, is cut off from the rest of Sarawak's road network. It is however linked by main road to Sabah and Brunei's Temburong district. There is a good local road network around Lawas district which is relatively free of traffic jams.The Lawas Bridge is located near Lawas.
Travelling from Miri to Lawas would need to go through checkpoints in Brunei and Limbang, totaling eight immigration checkpoints. Drive from the town of Lawas to Sarawak-Sabah border requires 30 minutes.
Two road border crossings are located in Lawas district:
- Mengkalap: It enters Labu in Temburong district, Brunei with Immigration, Customs and Quarantine Complex constructed here. Previously it was operating temporarily from a shoplot in Trusan Bazaar, 8 km from the actual Brunei-Malaysia border.
- Merapok: Immigration guard posts are located here which borders with Sindumin checkpoint located in Sabah. In 2015, Merapok-Sindumin guard posts handled 700,000 visitors.
Water transport
Brunei, Labuan and Limbang can be reached by boat. The journey will take around two hours to get to the destination. Boats to Brunei, Labuan and Limbang are available at Lawas Wharf every morning. The boats can accommodate around 150 passengers.
Air transport
Lawas is served by Lawas Airport. It has flights to Miri, Ba' Kelalan and Kota Kinabalu, Sabah.Public transport
There is a local bus network as well as buses linking Lawas with Kota Kinabalu, Miri and Brunei.Planning to build trains to Lawas
Other utilities
Education
- SK Ulu Merapok
- SK Tang Lapadan
- SK Sundar
- SK Siang-Siang
- SK Pusat Lawas
- SK Puru Sia
- SK Punang
- SK Merapok
- SK Luagan
- SK Long Tuma
- SK Long Tukon
- SK Long Tengoa
- SK Long Sukang
- SK Long Semadoh
- SK Long Sebangan
- SK Long Luping
- SK Kuala Lawas
- SK Kerangan
- SK Kampung Seberang
- SK Kampung Lintang
- SK Belipat
- SK Batu Lima
- SK Ba Kelalan
- SK Awat-Awat
- SK Aru Baru
- SK Agama Lawas
- SJK Soon Hwa Sundar
- SJK Chung Hwa Lawas
- SJK Chung Hua Trusan
- SMK Lawas
- SMK Merapok
- SMK Sundar
- SMK Trusan
- Centre of Technical Excellence Sarawak Lawas Campus
- MARA Junior Science College Lawas
- SMK Long Semadoh
- SMK Lawas 2
- Sekolah Berasrama Penuh Lawas
Healthcare
Culture and leisure
Lawas Mall
A planned RM210 million state government office complex cum three-storey shopping mall will be built next to Hotel Seri Malaysia and Lawas Town Square. The mall will houses a supermarket, departmental store and 132 commercial lots.Pasar Tamu Lawas
The open-air market, locally known as tamu, is held weekly on from Friday evening until Saturday afternoon. Local produce such as fresh fruits, vegetables, fresh meat, Adan rice, Bario rice, Ikan Tahai, Hill salts, handycraft traditional and live poultry are sold. The days of this weekly community occasion differ from district to district.Lepapa Hypermarket
- 1.Bowling Centre
- 2.Service Apartment
Activities
- Pesta Lawas
- Lawas Regatta
- Irau Aco Lun Bawang Festival
Places of interest
Besides Tamu Lawas, other interesting places in Lawas are Punang Beach, Sungai Bangat Beach, Pa' Lelau in Merarap, Mount Murud, Kampung air Terjun.
Kuala Lawas, Punang and Awat Awat are famous with its Kampung Air. It is similar to Kampung Ayer in Brunei but smaller. The main mode of transportation is perahu to cross the river.
Notable people
- YB Baru Bian from Lawas, the Ministry of Works the representative for N81 Ba'kelalan and P214 Selangau.
- YB Dato’ Henry Sum Agong, the former Deputy Ministry of Domestic Trade, Cooperative and Consumerism of Malaysia.
- YB Mutang Tagal from Lawas, former member of Dewan Rakyat of the 6th and 7th Parliament of Malaysia, representing P154 Bukit Mas and P177 Bukit Mas respectively. He is currently the honorary consul of Romania in Sarawak.
- Balang Lasung from Long Semado, Sarawak, former national javelin thrower who had won 4 gold medals for Malaysia in 1977 Kuala Lumpur SEA Games, 1979 Jakarta SEA Games, 1981 Manila SEA Games and 1983 Singapore SEA Games.