Kuala Lumpur
Stroll to the National Mosque in Kuala Lumpur, where there are no tickets, but the requirements for clothing are very strict, and they are uniformly changed into purple robes at the door.
Compared with Indonesia's national mosque volume is too small, Indonesia's can accommodate 10w people, Kuala Lumpur can only have 8000 people, not a level, so after seeing the bigger, this looks not so spectacular. Walk to the Twin Towers at night for night shots. It took more than three years for Petronas Malaysia to build it at a cost of RM2 billion. It was the tallest building in the world in the 1990s, but has since fallen out of the top10. At 452 meters, the height of 88 floors is still breathtaking, and the shape has become a symbol of Malaysia. The biggest impression is that without a super wide-angle, 28mm lens trying to frame two buildings is an impossible, physically insurmountable obstacle
Penang
Penang is best known for the more than 20 murals and graffiti scattered around the city. The origins of these murals can be traced back to a Lithuanian backpacker who came here many years ago and, with a trembling paintbrush in his hand, improvised a mural on the wall of Old Street, which was illegal at the time. Just as George City is celebrating into the world cultural heritage, this painting has attracted the attention of the relevant leaders of the municipal government, to put aside the domestic buddy is estimated to be a 10 years 8 years of it, plus deprivation of political power for life, and then find someone to rinse the end of the white wall story. But it didn't work out that way, and the local government thought, "Oh, good." And then you get this guy back, and you keep drawing me, and you don't leave until you finish, and then he draws eight more. Local street artists take a look! I can't! You can't do it all by yourself. Save some for us! Have taken to the streets to leave their works on the walls...... So these more than 20 paintings are put up in this way, of course, with the passage of time, the number is also gradually increasing.
Sabah, Malaysia
Sibadan in Sabah, Malaysia seems to have the most colorful Marine life in the world. A variety of Marine fish and Marine life, whether common species or cherished species, can be seen here. They are born here, played here, hunted here, and exist here. Whether you're an expert diver or a novice diver. Sibadan in Sabah, Malaysia is the ultimate underwater adventure for everyone
Kota Kinabalu
At that time, I did not know why the same country had to set up an additional border inspection and stamp an entry stamp when entering East Malaysia (Sabah). The question goes back to Malaysia's complicated recent history. Before Malaysia was not called Malaysia but Malaya, during the Great Voyage Malaya changed hands several times to Portugal, the Netherlands was finally occupied by the British, Malacca north is the British territory, south of Indonesia is the Dutch territory, and East Malaysia is now the entire island originally belonged to Brunei, and later was forcibly divided by the British into three parts, Brunei, Sabah, Sarawak.
The main reason was that there was no agreement on the revenue from undersea oil, and the Malay side only gave 5% of the revenue share. However, the leaders asked for 70% of the oil revenue as a condition for joining the Malayan side. Then, on the way back from the negotiation with the Malay government, the plane unfortunately broke down and crashed into the sea, all perished......... Later, Sabah and Sarawak joined the Malayan family to form Malaysia and realize the dream of Greater Malaysia together. Sabah and Sarawak, as self-ruled states of the United Nations, ostensibly also enjoy autonomy, which is why they have to set up customs, not only foreigners, but also people in West Malaysia to come in with a passport stamp
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