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Pengkalan Hulu

Coordinates: 5°43′N 101°00′E / 5.717°N 101.000°E / 5.717; 101.000
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(Redirected from Keroh)
Pengkalan Hulu
Town
Other transcription(s)
 • Jawiڤڠكالن هولو
 • Chinese高乌 (Simplified)
Gāowū (Hanyu Pinyin)
Gou1 Wu1 (Jyutping)
Official seal of Pengkalan Hulu
Pengkalan Hulu is located in Malaysia
Pengkalan Hulu
Pengkalan Hulu
Location of Pengkalan Hulu
Coordinates: 5°42′22″N 100°59′58″E / 5.70611°N 100.99944°E / 5.70611; 100.99944
CountryMalaysia
StatePerak
Government
 • TypeLocal government
 • BodyPengkalan Hulu District Council
 • PresidentMeor Shahibul Fadilah Zainuddin
Time zoneUTC+8 (Malaysian Standard Time)
Websitewww.mdph.gov.my
Pengkalan Hulu District Council

Majlis Daerah Pengkalan Hulu
Type
Type
History
Founded1 December 1979
Leadership
President
Meor Shahibul Fadilah Zainuddin
District Secretary
Noraslina Saidin
Motto
Bersih, Aman, Maju/برسيه امان ماجو
(Clean, Peace, Progressive)
Meeting place
Jalan Wisma Kroh 1, 33100, 33100 Pengkalan Hulu, Perak
Website
www.mdph.gov.my
Pengkalan Hulu in Hulu Perak District

Pengkalan Hulu, formerly known as Kroh or Keroh, is a town and a mukim in Hulu Perak District, Perak, Malaysia, bordering Thailand and Kedah. The nearest town on the Thailand side is Betong in Yala province.

Although described as a border town, Pengkalan Hulu is 6 km from the actual Malaysia-Thailand border which is located at Bukit Berapit, where the Malaysian customs, immigration and quarantine station is located. The town is served by both Federal Route 76, which connects it to Gerik and Kuala Kangsar to the south and Baling in Kedah to the north, and Federal Route 77 which goes in a northeasterly direction to Bukit Berapit and onward to Betong.

It is located at a height of 380 m above sea level.

Demographics

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Languages spoken here include Malay, Chinese (Hokkien as well as Cantonese), Tamil and Thai.[citation needed] The main religions are Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Christianity.[citation needed]. The population is largely Malay with significant Chinese, Thai and Indian segments.[1]

Government and politics

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Pengkalan Hulu Government Office

Pengkalan Hulu is also an autonomous sub-district (daerah kecil), consisting of the mukims of Pengkalan Hulu and nearby Belukar Semang.

In the Malaysian Parliament, Pengkalan Hulu is part of the Gerik parliamentary constituency.

History

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The history of Pengkalan Hulu began as the administrative center of Negeri Reman (part of Negeri Patani) whose borders were Kedah and Patani. However, Raja Reman invaded Klian Intan and established tin mining there, leading to several conflicts with the Perak government and several agreements brokered between the British, Siam, and Perak. In 1902, the Siamese government abolished the royal governance system in Negeri Reman. Subsequently, the Siamese government handed over the Hulu Perak district to the Perak government. The ceremony for the transfer of the Hulu Perak district took place in Kroh on July 16, 1909.

Pengkalan Hulu was formerly known as Kroh. The history of the name Kroh begins with a small river that flows through this area. The flowing river originates from a village called Selarong. Selarong means 'elephant path' in Arabic. This river served as a bathing and wallowing place for the elephants belonging to Raja Reman, whose number reached hundreds. To facilitate the bathing of these elephants, Raja Reman ordered the construction of a dam to impound water. The dammed river flow formed a small lake with constantly murky water. It is for this reason that the town was named Kroh in the past which in Malay means murky.

On January 4, 1984, during the reign of the 33rd Sultan of Perak, the late Sultan Idris Al-Mutawakkil Alallahi Shah (Sultan Idris Shah II), His Majesty graciously consented to change the name Kroh to Pengkalan Hulu because this place served as a stopover when His Majesty traveled to the Hulu Perak district.

Nowadays, the remnants of the small lake have been developed by the district administration into a recreational park called Taman Tasek Takong. The connection between elephants and the name Kroh has also been immortalized through the logo of the Pengkalan Hulu District Council, Perak Darul Ridzuan.[2]

Education

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  • Sekolah Kebangsaan kroh
  • Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan (Tamil) Pengkalan Hulu
  • Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan (Cina) Eok Kwan
  • Sekolah Kebangsaan Bekuai
  • Sekolah Kebangsaan Tasek
  • Sekolah Kebangsaan Kuak Hulu
  • Sekolah Kebangsaan Kuak Luar
  • Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Pengkalan Hulu
  • Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Tun Saban
  • Maktab Rendah Sains Mara
  • Pondok Madrasah AlLatiffiah (Pondok Pak Teh)
  • Madrasah Al yusuffiah

Mosques

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  • Masjid Jamek, Pekan Pengkalan Hulu
  • Masjid Al-Aula, Kampung Selarong
  • Masjid Al-Ghufran, Felda Lepang Nenering
  • Masjid Iskandari, Pekan Kroh, Jalan Tasek
  • Masjid Iskandariah, Kampung Kuak Luar
  • Masjid Air Panas, Kg.Air Panas
  • Masjid Klian Intan, Kg.Klian Intan
  • Masjid Al-Bakri, Kg.Kuak Hulu

Places of interest

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Malaysia CIQ at Bukit Berapit
  • Gunung Lang kuak hulu - recreation and view point.
  • Hot Spring Pond
  • Golf Course
  • Black River Cascade
  • Kuak Shoe Cascade
  • Kuak Rainbow Cascade
  • Gua Gendang (Caves of Drum)- a unique cave with underground stream situated in a nearby Siamese village called Kampung Tasek.
  • Taman Tasik Pengkalan Hulu - a unique human made lake with nice view located near the town of Pengkalan Hulu.
  • The Zone Free Duty Shopping Centre - Located near border of Thailand.
  • Kelian Intan, situated 20 km from Pengkalan Hulu town. Well known as one of the Black Areas in Malaysian history as a place for Communist Malaya Parties to hide. It is also connect Pengkalan Hulu town down south to Gerik Town.
  • "Northgate" is a mixed commercial and industrial development by the Indonesia-Malaysia-Thailand (IMT-GT) Growth Triangle.[3][4][5]

References

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  1. ^ "Pengkalan Hulu Population Statistics". City Population. Retrieved 2022-03-22.
  2. ^ "Info Pengkalan Hulu". MDPH Official Portal. Retrieved 2024-04-13.
  3. ^ Tourism Authority of Thailand, TAT Release, Jun 6, 2008 Visit IMT-GT 2008 Archived 2008-10-29 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ http://www.adb.org/Documents/IMT-GT/action-plan.pdf THE IMT-GT ROADMAP 2007-2011 ACTION PLAN: STATUS AND UPDATES
  5. ^ The Star Online June 13, 2010 Zambry: Bring IMT-GT back to its main focus
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5°43′N 101°00′E / 5.717°N 101.000°E / 5.717; 101.000