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Coordinates: 5°44′N 115°56′E / 5.733°N 115.933°E / 5.733; 115.933
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==Islam==
==Islam==
Papar is one of the first place in Sabah (North Borneo) function as a place for spreading Islam religion in Sabah. The district's first mosque was build at Kampung Laut around 1878, which then remained there until this day.
Papar is one of the first place in Sabah (North Borneo) function as a place for spreading Islam religion in Sabah. The district's first mosque was build at Kampung Laut around 1878, which then remained there until this day by the name Masjid Daerah Papar (Papar District Mosque). There are also some major mosques within district area such as Masjid Pekan Bongawan and Masjid Beringgis, both at Bongawan and Kinarut respectively.


==District==
==District==

Revision as of 19:14, 22 January 2011

Papar
Country Malaysia
State Sabah
Population
 (2006)
 • Total105,200

Papar is a town as well as a district located in West Coast Division of Sabah, east Malaysia. It is situated 38 kilometres south of Kota Kinabalu and is one of the main stops on the North Borneo Railway line other then Tanjung Aru, Putatan, Beaufort and Tenom in which Papar lies on the middle of the line. Papar is also a major stopover point for travelers from the southern towns Sipitang and Beaufort to Kota Kinabalu, as it would be at least twenty kilometers to the next township at both ends of the Pan Borneo Highway (Putatan to the north, Bongawan to the south).

The main road which branches off the Pan Borneo Highway into Papar town centre.

History

The name of 'Papar' came from Brunei word means flat or open land. Before the administration of British, Papar was administrated by Bruneian leader. Soon after, it was administrated by it's first officer, Datu Amir Bahar, of Bajau decent, who was responsible for the departure of the Bruneian leader. Papar then handed to Overbeck and Dent brothers, in 1877.

The first British officer to served Papar was H.L.Leicester. He started his first job in February 1878 with vision to increase economic income of Papar. However, his vision was almost impossible to be achieved in struggled with economic problem at that time by British North Borneo Company. He was later replaced by Everett.

Islam

Papar is one of the first place in Sabah (North Borneo) function as a place for spreading Islam religion in Sabah. The district's first mosque was build at Kampung Laut around 1878, which then remained there until this day by the name Masjid Daerah Papar (Papar District Mosque). There are also some major mosques within district area such as Masjid Pekan Bongawan and Masjid Beringgis, both at Bongawan and Kinarut respectively.

District

The population in the district was estimated to be around 105,200 in 2006,[nb 1] and almost evenly divided between Malay-Brunei (Benoni, Buang Sayang, Bongawan, Kampung Laut, Kelanahan, Kimanis, Kinarut), Kadazandusun (Rampazan, Limbahau, Kinarut, Kopimpinan, Lakut, Mondolipau, Koiduan, Ulu Kimanis, Sumbiling, Limputung), and Bajau (Pengalat Besar, Pengalat Kecil, Kawang, Beringgis). A sizeable Chinese from ethnic Hakka, is also scattered throughout the district along with numbers of Indian and Pakistani.

The Papar area is characterised by low lying coastal areas which extend inland towards the Crocker Range.[1] Traditionally this was good rice growing land and the flat open paddy fields may have given it the name. Even today, despite the rapid expansion of the city of Kota Kinabalu around 40 km north of Papar, the district is still dominated by paddy fields, which are largely worked by natives, and fruit orchards, most of which belong to the Hakka Chinese.


Town

A typical small-town sundry shop owned by ethnic Hakka Chinese in Papar.
File:Papar.jpg
Papar town during rain.
File:Papar river.jpg
Papar river.

The town itself occupies the southern banks of the Papar River not far from the sea. There are also areas of tidal wetland that are home to mangrove trees and saltwater palm or nipah. Both banks are connected by two steel-concrete bridges, one (a railway bridge) directly into the town itself and another much farther upriver (on the old Kota Kinabalu-Papar road) leading into the paddy plantation hamlets.

The town has seen considerable growth in recent years but still preserves some of its older buildings and features, such as the railway station and a large banyan tree. St Joseph's Secondary School stands opposite the station and behind the Catholic Church of St Joseph's. The older segments of the town, identifiable by timber buildings and comprising of mostly cafés and sundry shops, are being renovated either by design or as the result of fires that have destroyed parts of the town. Other older landmarks have been lost, for example rubber plantations that existed on the northern bank of the river were cut down and replaced by the villages Buang Sayang and Melugus along with a very large school complex.

Important architectural features which can be seen in the Papar town includes: the District Office-Public Library-Public Park complex; the Papar Market; the OKK Mahali Park (which constitutes a large part of the new town); a Public Hall (which also hosts a weekly wet market on its compounds); a sports complex with a field, a stand and a gymnasium; and the train station, which doubles as a bus and mini-van station which serves the Kota Kinabalu-Papar-Beaufort route.

Despite repair and refurbishment over the years, the Papar railway bridge looks much as it did in the Second World War. It featured in Allied plans to retake North Borneo from the Japanese. References to it and the Papar River can be found in reports on covert intelligence operations Agas and Semut, and later in attack plans Stallion and Oboe 6.[2]

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Monthly Statistical Bulletin, January 2007: Sabah", Department of Statistics Malaysia, Sabah.

5°44′N 115°56′E / 5.733°N 115.933°E / 5.733; 115.933