Karak, Pahang

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Tamilகாராக்
Kārāk (Transliteration)
Country Malaysia
Karak
Town
Other transcription(s)
  Jawiکارق‎‎
  Chinese加叻
Jiālè (Hanyu Pinyin)
  Tamilகாராக்
Kārāk (Transliteration)
Interactive map of Karak
Karak is located in Pahang
Karak
Karak
   Karak in    Pahang
Karak is located in Malaysia
Karak
Karak
Karak (Malaysia)
Karak is located in Southeast Asia
Karak
Karak
Karak (Southeast Asia)
Coordinates: 3°24′55.44″N 102°01′59.88″E / 3.4154000°N 102.0333000°E / 3.4154000; 102.0333000
Country Malaysia
StatePahang Pahang Darul Makmur
DistrictBentong District
Federal seatBentong
State seatSabai
Government
  TypeMunicipal council
  BodyBentong Municipal Council
  Yang DipertuaDato' Hajah Aida Munira Binti Abdul Rafar
  Member of ParliamentYoung Syefura Othman
  State Assembly RepresentativeV Arumugam
Time zoneUTC+8 (MST)
Postcode
28600
Telephone area code+6-09231XXXX
Vehicle registrationC
PoliceKarak Police Station [1]
FireKarak Fire and Rescue Station
Websitewww.mpbentong.gov.my/en

Karak is a small town in Bentong District, Pahang, Malaysia. Located at the foothills of Malaysia's Titiwangsa Mountain Range, it is well known as a rest town along the Federal Route 2 from Kuala Lumpur to Kuantan and lends its name to the Karak Highway, or the Kuala Lumpur-Karak Expressway linking it to the country's capital of Kuala Lumpur.

Karak Highway

The town of Karak and its outlying areas are located about 20 km southeast of the region's municipal capital of Bentong, at an elevation of 72 metres,[2] with several outlying villages within the area's outskirts, including Kampung Cinta Manis, Kampung Jambu Rias, Kampung Karak Setia, Kampung Sungai Dua, and Taman Seri Bentong, all located within the town's sub-district outskirts.

The town's exact population is unknown, however a 2020 census by the Department of Statistics placed the Pahang state assembly seat of Sabai (which Karak is a part of) at 21,543 people.[3]

Much of the town is located along the main Jalan Lama Bentong-Karak (Old Bentong-Karak road in English) trunk road coming from the municipal capital of Bentong, with a fork in the road on its eastern outskirts bound for the village of Lanchang in the east and the village of Telemong in the south.

The town can be accessed via Exit 813 just off the eastern end of the Karak Highway and the beginning of the East Coast Expressway East Coast Expressway,[4] both managed by the highway concessionaire ANIH Berhad. The expressway runs parallel to the Federal Route 2 trunk road, which cuts through the town linking it to Gombak, Selangor.

Considered a small but growing town by modern Malaysian standards, Karak is home to several residential areas, a police station, a fire department, a government clinic,[5] several national as well as Chinese and Tamil vernacular schools[6] in and around the town, and two local community colleges: the Kolej Yayasan Pahang Advanced Skills and the Malaysian Technical Skills Academy.

It is also home to several places of worship, including three mosques: the Masjid Jamek Bandar Karak[7] in the town's limits, as well as two more on the town's eastern outskirts, the Masjid Karak Setia[8] and the Masjid Al-Ihsan Kg. Jambu Rias,[9] the Karak Chinese Methodist Church,[10] the Sri Bala Subramaniar Hindu temple,[11] two Chinese temples, including a temple hall within the town's limits [12] and the Ti Mu temple[13] on the town's outskirts.

There are three petrol stations, two banks, a post office, and several commercial shoplots placed throughout the town. The shoplots include restaurants, vehicle workshops, convenience stores, mini-markets, and various other businesses.

History

Politics

References

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