Sandakan

Malaysia
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Also known as: Elopura

News

Firefighters rescue boy from locked car in Sandakan Nov. 1, 2024, 2:01 AM ET (The Star)
Man walks free on drug trafficking charge in Sandakan Oct. 31, 2024, 2:01 AM ET (The Star)

Sandakan, city and port, eastern Sabah, East Malaysia, northeastern Borneo. It is located on an inlet of the Sulu Sea, near the mouth of the Kinabatangan River, on the heavily indented east coast. The capital of British North Borneo (now Sabah) until 1947, it is the commercial heart of the state.

Founded in 1874 as Elopura, the port’s development depended on trade in jungle products such as timber, rattan, birds’ nests, dammar, and coconuts. Its commercial links have historically been with Hong Kong, Japan, and Australia. Hemmed in by highlands, much of central Sandakan has been built on land reclaimed from the sea since the early 1920s.

Chinese (mainly Cantonese from Hong Kong) dominate the city, where their characteristic three-to-four-story concrete shop houses intermingle with taller office buildings. Oceangoing ships of more than 11,000 tons are unable to penetrate its harbour because of the silt and sandbars deposited around the entrance by the Kinabatangan. Nevertheless, the spacious harbour (20 miles [32 km] long by 3 to 10 miles [5 to 16 km] wide) has become the outlet of Sabah’s booming post-World War II trade in timber, copra, and manila hemp. Most of the logs are loaded via lighters onto ships anchored beyond the mud bars; a large wharf handles ships of shallow draft. Large oil-palm and cocoa estates have been established in the area. Other activities include boatbuilding, cutch extraction, freezing, and prawn packing.

Sandakan has an airport and is linked by road to Kota Kinabalu, the state capital, via Ranau. Nearby Red Hill offers a panoramic view of the harbour, including Berhala Island, a retreat for swimming, fishing, and diving. Also in the vicinity is a renowned orangutan sanctuary at Sepilok (north), and the large Gomantong Caves (southwest) are inhabited by swiftlets (whose nests are collected for birds’ nest soup, a Chinese delicacy) and a large colony of bats. Pop. (2000 prelim.) 220,000.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.
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