What's new

Sultanate of Sulu demand the return of Sabah from Malaysia?

MNLF warns of ‘long war’ with Malaysia
By Perseus Echeminada and Jaime Laude (The Philippine Star) | Updated April 1, 2013

MANILA, Philippines - The Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) yesterday warned of a “long, protracted war” against Malaysia if the country will not heed the call of the United Nations for a peaceful resolution of the ongoing Sabah crisis.

MNLF spokesman Emmanuel Fontanilla told The STAR that the royal army of the sultanate of Sulu and thousands of Tausugs in Sabah are now waging a guerrilla war against the Malaysian forces over their claim to the disputed territory, and “if Malaysia will not sit on the negotiating table and continue its barbaric all-out war, it will be facing a long protracted war against the Tausug people in Sabah.”

Fontanilla also said the MNLF would elevate the cases of human rights violations allegedly committed by Malaysian forces against Filipino Muslims in Sabah to the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) next week.

He said the MNLF central committee is drafting the petition, and that the elevation of the Sabah conflict to the OIC is MNLF’s top priority because the group has a permanent observer status representing Filipino Muslims in the council.

Fontanilla also condemned the alleged support of President Aquino for the Malaysian government in quashing Sultan Jamalul Kiram III and his royal army, who are now the subject of a massive military operation in Sabah.

“Instead of working for Malaysia, the President should have remained neutral and pursued the promotion and protection of rights of the Filipinos in Sabah in accordance with International laws,” Fontanilla said.

Phl, Malaysia ties strong

Meanwhile, United States-based think tank Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) said that the relations between the Philippines and Malaysia would remain strong despite the Sabah crisis.

But CSIS also noted that the Sabah conflict is taking its toll on people-to-people relations between the two Southeast Asian countries due to rising nationalist sentiments.

“Malaysia and Philippines are close partners on economic and security issues and the relationship between the two governments appears largely unaffected by the conflict,” said Gregory Polling of CSIS.

But the fighting between the sultanate’s forces and Malaysian security forces is hurting people-to-people relations between Filipinos and Malaysians, as the crisis continues to spawn nationalistic sentiments on both sides towards the issue.

Polling also said both the Filipino and Malaysian publics have been critical of their government’s handling of the conflict and disapprove of the escalating violence.

“Many groups in the Philippines sympathize with Sultan Kiram’s cause and believe that he has been wronged by history. Many are concerned about the 800,000 Filipinos living in Sabah, many of them poor and undocumented, who could be targeted in the assault or deported,” Polling said.

He also said the public mood worsened when President Aquino urged the sultanate fighters to surrender.

If the conflict in Sabah further worsens, speculations are also high that Malaysian leadership will use this as a ground to postpone the elections.

“This is extremely unlikely because many Malaysians would consider it a mere ruse to delay the polls at a time when the ruling coalition’s popularity has been falling,” Polling said.

http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2013/04/01/925588/mnlf-warns-long-war-malaysia



Malaysia to face UN over Sabah Filipino abuses claims

BY DEBRA CHONG
ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
APRIL 01, 2013

KUALA LUMPUR, April 1 — Outraged Philippine civil society groups have filed human rights violations complaints against Malaysia to the United Nations over serious allegations by returning Filipinos fleeing the month-long armed conflict raging in Sabah’s restive east coast, the Manila Times reported.

The Philippine newspaper reported concerned groups and individuals had lodged reports yesterday with UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navanethem Pillay (picture), and UN High Commissioner for Refugees, António Guterres, who are both based in Geneva, Switzerland, after failing to move the Aquino administration to exert pressure on Putrajaya.

The activists were reported to have petitioned the two UN agencies to “urgently intervene so that Malaysia will respect the human rights of the Filipinos in Sabah, recognised under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”

Among the signatories named by the daily were the Concerned Citizens Movement, CenterLaw, Bagong Alyansang Makabayan, and Anakbayan. Individuals who signed the letter included Philippine human rights lawyer Harry Roque, activist nun Sister Mary John Mananzan, whistleblower Rodolfo “Jun” Lozada, journalist Vergel Santos, and political strategist Pastor “Boy” Saycon, who serves as adviser to Jamalul Kiram III, one of the heirs of the Sultanate of Sulu.

The campaigners also asked the two UN bodies “to express grave concern on the massive and gross human rights violations by Malaysia against Filipinos in Sabah” and to remind Malaysia to “provide effective remedies and compensation to the Filipino victims of the massive and gross human rights violations committed against them by Malaysian state agents”, according to the daily.

Citing the activists, the paper reported Malaysia’s authorities had violated numerous provisions in the Universal Declaration on Human Rights on protection against discrimination, life, liberty, security, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, arbitrary arrest, detention or exile, and right to a fair trial.

The activists were reported to have penned two 11-page letters citing media reports, particularly from the widely-read The Philippine Daily Inquirer, detailing the maltreatment of Filipinos in Sabah starting from February 14 when “suspected Filipino gunmen numbering between 80 and 100 were cornered in Sabah on Borneo Island, triggering the start of the Sabah standoff.”

The Philippine media have been highlighting the growing restlessness among Filipinos at Malaysia’s heavy-handed handling of the Sabah conflict, despite having previously assured it would practise “maximum tolerance” while Manila continues talks with the Kiram clan, a marginalised Muslim faction claiming to be heirs of the 17th-century Sulu sultanate who had been left out of peace negotiations brokered by Putrajaya last year.

Some 5,000 Filipinos have returned to their homeland with tales of human rights abuses that have enraged fellow Philippine citizens and lawmakers since the Sabah crisis began on February, triggered by Sulu rebel leader Agbimuddin Kiram’s invasion of the north Borneo state which has been under Malaysian rule for the past 50 years since 1963.

Fierce gunfights have claimed the lives of 62 Sulu militants, eight Malaysian policemen and two soldiers.

Civilians of unknown nationalities have also been reported killed in clashes, caught between the Malaysian security forces hunting down the foreign intruders and spurred thousands of Filipinos to flee Sabah for their homeland out of fear of capture.

The Philippine Senate has demanded its government hold Malaysia accountable for the possible human rights violations on the 800,000-strong Filipino migrant community in Sabah at the hands of local authorities searching for a ragtag band of Sulu militants claiming ownership of the north Borneo state.

The volatile situation in Sabah appears to be election fodder with both the Philippines and Malaysia readying for national polls this year.

Main - Malaysia - Malaysia to face UN over Sabah Filipino abuses claims @ Mon Apr 01 2013
 
Sultan’s army gets reinforcements in Sabah
By Perseus Echeminada, Helen Flores (The Philippine Star) | Updated April 1, 2013

gen3b.jpg


MANILA, Philippines - Some 100 heavily armed men have joined the followers of Agbimuddin Kiram in Sabah to continue fighting Malaysian forces in Lahad Datu, sultanate spokesman Abraham Idjirani said yesterday.

Idjirani said Agbimuddin, brother of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III called him up to report that some heavily armed civilians have joined the fighting in Sabah.

Idjirani said the civilians managed to slip through the sea blockade of the Malaysian and Philippine navy forces in going to Sabah.

“(Agbimuddin) called me about the arrival of civilians with arms who have joined the royal security forces,” Idjirani said.

It was not known where the armed civilians came from but sources said some are Tausugs from various parts of Mindanao who arrived in small groups to avoid the Malaysian and Philippine naval blockade at the Sulu Sea.

Heavy fighting was reported in Lahad Datu yesterday where Malaysian troops are conducting mopping-up operations to flush out the remaining members of Kiram’s forces.

Idjirani also reported that relatives of Kiram who are long-time residents of Sabah went into hiding after Malaysian police began its crackdown on suspected supporters of the sultan’s army.

“The relatives of sultan are now living in fear and have gone into hiding,” he said.

DFA visits 8 accused of terrorism

Last Thursday, Philippine embassy officials in Kuala Lumpur were allowed to visit eight men facing charges for terrorism-related violence for their involvement in the Sabah incident.

Philippine Ambassador to Kuala Lumpur Eduardo Malaya, in a statement, identified the eight as Atik Hussin Bin Abu Bakar, Basad H. Manuel, Habil Bin Suhali, Holland Bin Kalbi, Thimhar Hadil Sultan, Lin Bin Mad Salleh, Kadir Bin Uyung and Lating Bin Tiong.

Malaya did not say if the eight, detained at the prison facility in Tawau, are Filipinos. The Sulu sultanate had earlier said the eight are Malaysians.

He said it is the “standing policy” of the government “to provide appropriate consular assistance to nationals in distress, whether or not we agree with their acts or advocacies... We would like to ensure that their rights as accused are respected and that they have legal representation when court sessions resume on April 12 as promised by Malaysia authorities.”

Malaya said the embassy team, led by First Secretary and Consul Antonina Mendoza-Oblena and director Renato Villa, talked to the eight and asked them about their prison conditions. The team also asked the accused about their places of origin and respective families.

The eight were the first to face charges since about 200 followers of the Sulu sultan assembled at the coastal town of Lahad Datu last month to press ownership over Sabah.

The embassy said it may be difficult to extend consular assistance to the sultan’s brother Agbimuddin. Malaysian Defense Minister Datuk Seri Zahid Hamidi said Agbimuddin is a Malaysian citizen who worked as a civil servant in Sabah.



Sulu sultan meets with Catholic bishops
By Mike Frialde (philstar.com) | Updated April 1, 2013

MANILA, Philippines - The Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo on Monday met with members of the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) in a bid to tap its support and the Vatican’s on the resolution of the ongoing Sabah standoff.

Abraham Idjirani, the spokesman of the Sultanate told reporters that the meeting between the CBCP led by its president, Cebu Archbishop Jose Palma and Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III was brokered by Dante Jimenez, chairman of the Volunteers Against Crime and Corruption.

Joining Sultan Kiram in the meeting with the bishops were his daughter Princess Jacel Kiram, Idjirani and political strategist Pastor “Boy” Saycon, the Sultanate’s political consultant.

Idjirani told reporters that Sultan Kiram will try to convince the bishops of the Sultanate’s claim over Sabah through the presentation of several documents.

The documents include a “grant of letters of administration” in the Sessions Court of North Borneo dated 1939 which recognized the authority of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo over Sabah; a 1999 letter to the editor of the Daily Zamboanga Times which stated that the 1939 judgment of the High Court of Borneo confirmed the propriety rights over Sabah by the descendants of Sulu Sultan Punjungan Kiram; and a letter addressed to Sulu Datu Punjungan Kiram from the British Legation in Manila dated October 18, 1950 confirming the legation’s preparedness to pay the Sultanate the sum of P1,301.79 in cession money.

Idjirani also said that in addition to proving the Sultanate’s claim over Sabah, the Sultanate would also want to assure the CBCP and the Holy See that it intends to recover Sabah not only for Muslims, but for Christians as well.

“We want to prove to them that the intention of the Sultan is not only for the Muslims. This is not only exclusive for the Muslims but also inclusive of our Christian brothers and sisters, including the indigenous peoples,” he said.

“Sabah is not for sale but is the patrimony of the Filipino people,” Idjirani added.

Idjirani is confident that the Sultanate of Sulu will be able to tap the support of the CBCP and later, the Vatican as well, on the Sabah issue.

“It is the intention of Sultan Jamalul Kiram III to talk with the CBCP. We cannot deny the influence of the CBCP. This Sabah issue concerns geopolitics. We need the support of the Vatican here,” he said.

“So hopefully the president of the CBCP will invite the attention of the Vatican to also do something about it because the Vatican advocates peace, prosperity and respect for human rights. Especially now that we have a new Pope,” he said.

Idjirani added that the Vatican would most likely take an interest in what is happening now in Sabah as about 25 percent of Sabah’s population is Christian.

“We cannot deny that about 25 percent of the population in Sabah is Christian. The Sultan wants to assure the CBCP and the Holy See that in case Sabah is returned to the Sultanate of Sulu, all religions will be respected according to the teachings of Islam,” he said.

“Islam says not to belittle any religion. Allah says to do that would be an immortal sin,” Idjirani added.

http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2013/04/01/925744/sulu-sultan-meets-catholic-bishops
 
ASEAN will stay out of Sabah dispute

MANILA, Philippines - The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) will not intervene in the Sabah dispute as it is seen as a bilateral issue, a former head of the regional bloc said on Tuesday, March 19.

"Most of ASEAN considers this is a bilateral issue between the Philippines and Malaysia," noted Rodolfo Severino, former ASEAN Secretary-General (1998-2002) and current Director of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore.

Severino explained that the regional bloc does not have a general policy of mediating in bilateral disputes and "settled" the issue when Malaysia joined ASEAN in 1963 with Sabah as part of its recognized territory.

"What happened recently is probably what I consider the impatience of certain groups for the resolution of this case," he said.

Severino, also a former ambassador to Malaysia, explained that the Sabah "problem" goes back not only to 1963 -- when ASEAN was formed -- but even to 1936, when Jamalul Kiram II, the last Sulu Sultan officially recognized by Manila, died without a male heir and opened up the question of his succession. (Read: Sabah as the last gold coin)

The expert said that "the problem is there are 2 separate claims: one is the sovereignty claim [to be pursued by the Philippine government] and the other is the proprietary claim [raised by self-proclaimed Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III]."

"One must distinguish between [them]," Severino concluded.

Kiram has asked for both ASEAN and the United Nations to intervene in the conflict, even to send peacekeepers, but so far his requests have been rejected by both governments. - Rappler.com
----------------
I personally think it's best for the UN to send peacekeepers, since this is going no where.
 
Sultan’s men set up guerrilla base
By Perseus Echeminada (The Philippine Star) | Updated April 15, 2013

gen1w.jpg


MANILA, Philippines - After eluding Malaysian authorities for several weeks, the followers of the sultanate of Sulu have set up a guerrilla base in the hinterlands of Sabah, the sultanate’s spokesman said yesterday.

Abraham Idjirani told reporters that the Malaysian military and police knew about the base but could not pinpoint the exact location because the jungle in the area is vast.

Idjirani said the new stronghold is in a strategic location with enough sources of food and water, and with adequate shelter for nearly 500 men.

The base was reported to Idjirani during a conversation the other day with Agbimuddin Kiram, the sultanate-appointed “administrator” of Sabah.

A source from the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF)said the base was their former camp where a cache of high-powered weapons was kept at the height of the Mindanao uprising in the early ‘70s.

The source said the base was established by MNLF fighters who joined the group in Lahad Datu to press their proprietary claim over Sabah.

Idjirani clarified the sultan’s fighters would continue to adopt defensive position and would not initiate any attack on the Malaysian forces.

The Malaysian military and police have stopped the operation against the armed group. The last encounter took place last April 9.

Aside from the 400 new arrivals from Sulu, Basilan and Tawi-Tawi, Tausugs based in Lahad Datu and Semporna have also joined the sultanate army at the stronghold.

Idjirani said 80 percent of the army is now fully armed and ready to repeal any attack on the base by Malaysian authorities.

Meanwhile, the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) continues to provide transport for Filipinos evacuating Sabah.

Last Saturday, the BRP Nueva Vizcaya evacuated 79 Filipinos to Bongao, Tawi-Tawi; 17 others, including 12 children and five adults were brought to Jolo, and 62 to Zamboanga City. – With Rainier Allan Ronda

http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2013/04/15/930811/sultans-men-set-guerrilla-base
 
Rally set to end Sabah crisis
By Edd K. Usman
Published: April 14, 2013

2ljgah2.jpg


A rally is set for April 21 in Jolo to press the Malaysian and Philippine government to peacefully resolve the Sabah issue once and for all.

Abraham J. Idjirani, spokesman of the sultanate, said the “massive rally” will be attended by prominent leaders from the political, professional and religious sectors as well as some former Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) leaders in support of the sultanate's Sabah claim.

This developed as another of Jamalul Kiram III's younger brothers, Datu Alianapia who is living in Semporna, Sabah, had eluded his Malaysian pursuers.

Idjirani said the datu is now with Rajah Muda Agbimuddin Kiram and his men, and being treated from injuries he sustained while on the run. He added that Agbimuddin, the crown prince, now has about 500 “volunteers” with him from Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Basilan and other parts of Mindanao.

“About 80 percent of them are armed,” Idjirani said. “The Malaysian military knows where they are, but not the specific area. Even if the rajah doesn't stay in one permanent area, their stronghold has widened,” he added.

He said Agbimuddin has no plans to leave Sabah now that he has more men.

Meanwhile, the Malaysian government has announced that Operation Daulat (Sovereign) in Sabah is ending in a few days under the new Eastern Sabah Security Command (Esscom).

http://www.mb.com.ph/article.php?aid=7594&sid=1&subid=1#.UWu5JbWnpPl
 
Malaysian forces tighten security in Sabah to prevent new 'wave' of intruders as polls near
April 22, 2013

As the elections there draw closer, Malaysian security forces are tightening security in the area of Sabah where followers of Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III managed to enter last February.

Defense Minister Datu Seri Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said the Malaysian Armed Forces and police are monitoring the Eastern Sabah Security Zone to deter possible new "waves" of intruders, Malaysia's state-run Bernama news agency reported.

Zahid also said the police and military will be present in voting district centers in Lahad Datu to ensure voters' safety.

"We are always prepared to stop a second or third wave of intruders," he said Sunday night.

Armed followers of Kiram led by Kiram's brother Raja Muda Azzimudie Kiram had entered Sabah last February and engaged Malaysian forces in a three-week standoff.

The standoff ended in deadly clashes March 1 and 2, leading to offensives by Malaysian forces last March 5.

Malaysia has since set up the Eastern Sabah Security Zone (ESSCOM) to detect and repel the possible entry of "intruders." —KG, GMA News

Malaysian forces tighten security in Sabah to prevent new 'wave' of intruders as polls near | News | GMA News Online
 
Good news for Malaysia. Bad news for Kiram and his followers
 
Malaysian. If so, that is definately good.

No as in the MNLF (Malaysian train) its ironic the Malaysians train the MNLF to fight the Philippines now the People they train is fighting them oh Karma is power lady.
 
Heirs of sultan urge Sulu folk to regain Sabah peacefully
(The Philippine Star) | Updated April 24, 2013

ZAMBOANGA CITY, Philippines – The heirs of the sultanate of Sulu have called on the people of Sulu to regain Sabah through peaceful means.

At a rally in Jolo, Habib Mujahab Hashim, council of royal sharifs (religious and property custodians) chairman, urged the people Sulu to mobilize their resources and bring Malaysia to the negotiating table.

“In calling for the end to the Sabah crisis, we believe that it is morally and spiritually wrong for two Islamic nations – Malaysia and the sultanate – to sacrifice human lives for the sake of a cause which can be addressed peacefully,” he said.

Hashim said the sovereignty rights of the sultanate of Sulu must be settled before a neutral body like the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.

A peaceful resolution is primarily founded on the Islamic teaching of peaceful settlement of conflicts and differences among the adherents of Islam, he added.

Hashim said they strongly believe that the sultanate of Sulu has the legitimate, legal and historical rights to assert sovereignty over Sabah.

“This sovereignty right over Sabah has been recognized for long by great nations of the world at that time, but only recently has the sovereignty of the sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo been questioned, denied and stolen from us before our eyes,” he said.

Hashim said the lease contract to Sabah was translated into English from Tausug as grant and cession.

In 1946, the British North Borneo Company illegally transferred and ceded Sabah to the British Crown, he added.

Hashim said the British Crown then illegally annexed Sabah and made it a dominion.

In 1963, the British Crown illegally passed on Sabah to the Federation of Malaya after an illegal plebiscite without the consent of the sultanate of Sulu, he added.

MNLF fighters land in Sabah

Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) fighters numbering 1,000 have landed in Sabah to reinforce the sultanate’s forces in Lahad Datu.

Abraham Idjirani, sultanate spokesman, said Agbimuddin Kiram, commander of the forces in Lahad Datu, confirmed to him the arrival of the MNLF fighters.

The volunteers are already in Sabah although they have not yet joined Agbimuddin’s forces, he said.

Idjirani said the fully-armed MNLF fighters are carrying anti-tank weapons.

Agbimuddin’s men remain mobile and continue to evade Malaysian security forces, he added.

“They have taken positions away from Kampung Tanduo and Tanjung Batu,” Idjirani said.

Hajib Mujaha Hashim, MNLF Islamic Command Council chairman, said the MNLF fighters are seasoned guerillas.

“They are experienced in guerilla warfare,” he said.

“They are there not officially as MNLF, but we could not prevent MNLF forces from going there and reinforcing the royal army of the sultanate of Sulu in the area.”

Idjirani said he expects clashes between the sultanate’s forces and Malaysian security forces to resume soon following the arrival of MNLF reinforcements.

“At the moment, the Malaysians are very busy with their upcoming election and do not want to disturb Sabah where there are more than 600,000 Bangsa Suluk residents and voters,” he said.

Idjirani said the Bangsa Suluks in Sabah have kept strong ties with the people of Sulu.

“Prime Minister Najib (Razak) is afraid of offending them,” he said. “It might cost him votes.”

A Tausug leader in Sulu said almost daily, Tausug fighters have been landing in batches in Sabah from Sulu, Tawi-Tawi and Basilan.

“I don’t have the exact figure, but Tausug fighters have made it through Sabah and have already linked up” with the sultanate’s forces, he said. – Roel Pareño, Mike Frialde, Jaime Laude

http://www.philstar.com/headlines/2...sultan-urge-sulu-folk-regain-sabah-peacefully
 

Back
Top Bottom