INGAPORE

Singapore Custom
Regulations
International
shipping to Singapore officially the Republic
of Singapore is an island nation
located at the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula.
It lies 137 kilometers (85 mi) north of the Equator, south of the Malaysian
state of Johor and north of Indonesia's
Riau Islands. At 704.0 km² (272 sq mi), it is
one of the few remaining city-states in the world and the smallest country in Southeast Asia.
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The British
East India Company established a trading post on the island in 1819. The main
settlement up to that point was a Malay fishing village at the mouth of the Singapore River. Several hundred indigenous Orang
Laut people also lived around the coast, rivers and smaller islands. The British
used Singapore as a
strategic trading post along the spice route, It
became one of the most important commercial and military centers of the British Empire. Winston Churchill called it "Britain's
greatest defeat" when it was occupied by the Japanese during World War II. Singapore reverted to British rule
in 1945. In 1963, it merged with Malaya, Sabah and Sarawak to form Malaysia.
Less than two years later it split from the federation and became an
independent republic on 9 August 1965. Singapore joined the United Nations
on September 21 that same year.
Since
independence, Singapore's
standard of living has increased. A state-led industrialization drive, aided by
foreign direct investment has created a modern economy based on electronics
manufacturing, petrochemicals, tourism and financial services alongside the traditional
entrepôt trade. Singapore
is the 17th wealthiest country in the world in terms of GDP per capita. The
small nation has a foreign reserve of S$222 billion (US$147 billion).
The Constitution
of the Republic
of Singapore established
the nation's political system as a representative democracy, while the country
is recognized as a parliamentary republic. The People's Action Party (PAP)
dominates the political process and has won control of Parliament in every
election since self-government in 1959.
Singapore consists of 63 islands, including
mainland Singapore.
There are two man-made connections to Johor,
Malaysia — Johor-Singapore
Causeway in the north, and Tuas Second Link in the west. Jurong
Island, Pulau Tekong, Pulau Ubin and Sentosa
are the largest of Singapore's
many smaller islands. The highest natural point of Singapore is Bukit Timah
Hill at 166 m (545 ft).
The
south of Singapore, around
the mouth of the Singapore
River and what is now the
Downtown Core, used to be the only concentrated urban area, while the rest of
the land was either undeveloped tropical rainforest or used for agriculture.
Since the 1960s, the government has constructed new residential towns in
outlying areas, resulting in an entirely built-up urban landscape. The Urban
Redevelopment Authority was established on 1 April 1974, responsible for urban
planning.
Singapore has on-going land reclamation projects
with earth obtained from its own hills, the sea-bed, and neighboring countries.
As a result, Singapore's
land area grew from 581.5 km² (224.5 sq mi) in the 1960s to
704 km² (271.8 sq mi) today, and may grow by another 100 km²
(38.6 sq mi) by 2030. The projects sometimes involve some of the
smaller islands being merged together through land reclamation in order to form larger, more functional islands, such as in the
case of Jurong Island.
Under
the Köppen climate classification system, Singapore has a tropical rainforest
climate with no distinctive seasons. Its climate is characterized by uniform temperature and pressure, high humidity, and
abundant rainfall. Temperatures range from 22 °C to 34 °C (72°–93 °F). On
average, the relative humidity is around 90 percent in the morning and 60
percent in the afternoon. During prolonged heavy rain, relative humidity often
reaches 100 percent. The lowest and highest temperatures recorded in its
maritime history are 18.4 °C (65.1 °F) and 37.8 °C
(100.0 °F) respectively. The highest wind speed recorded was 150 km/h
(93 mph) on 26 May 2007. June and July are the hottest months, while
November and December make up the wetter monsoon season. From August to
October, there is often haze, sometimes severe enough to prompt public health
warnings, due to bushfires in neighboring Indonesia. Singapore does not observe daylight
saving time or a summer time zone change. The length of the day is nearly
constant year round due to the country's location near the equator.
About
23 percent of Singapore's
land area consists of forest and
nature reserves. Urbanization has eliminated many areas of former primary rainforest, with the only remaining
area of primary rainforest being Bukit
Timah Nature Reserve. A variety of parks are maintained with human
intervention, such as the Singapore Botanic Gardens.Without natural freshwater
rivers and lakes, the primary domestic source of water supply in Singapore is
rainfall, collected in reservoirs or catchment areas. Rainfall supplies
approximately 50 percent of Singapore's
water; the remainder is imported from neighbouring countries or obtained from recycled
water facilities and desalination plants. More new water and desalination
plants are being built or proposed to reduce reliance on import
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