The Mindanao Examiner Regional Newspaper

SABAH IS OURS!

‘Malaysia tightens grip on mineral-rich island of Sulu sultanate’

- (Mindanao Examiner)

MALAYSIA HAS tightened its grip on Sabah which is being claimed by the Sultanate of Sulu following a a proposal by a member of of the Philippine­s’ 25-man consultati­ve consultati­ve committee tasked with reviewing and amendments to the Constituti­on – to include the mineral-rich island as the country’s 13th federal state.

Former senator Aquilino Pimentel Jr made the proposal while Filipino lawmakers are preparing to amend the 1987 Constituti­on and shift from presidenti­al to federal form of government. He said the Duterte administra­tion should continue to push for the country's claim to Sabah in a way acceptable to internatio­nal laws.

“There should be a way that is acceptable under internatio­nal laws to assert our claim to Sabah. I think we can defer it a little bit more, but to say that we stop doing it is not in the context of my proposal,” he told ABS-CBN Television.

He also wanted Scarboroug­h and Spratlys - which is being claimed by China and other ASEAN countries as theirs – to be part of the federated states of the Philippine­s. Pimentel has also proposed the following to form part of the federal states Northern Luzon, Central Luzon, Southern Luzon, Bicol, Eastern Visayas, Central Visayas, Western Visayas, Minparom, Northern Mindanao, Southern Mindanao, Bangsamoro and Metro Manila as its capital.

“Eventually once we have asserted our sovereignt­y and rights over Sabah, we should include Sabah. Not only Sabah, but also Scarboroug­h, Benham Rise, and Spratlys,” Pimentel said.

According to a report by Channel News Asia, Kuala Lumpur has strongly rejected Pimentel’s proposal to include Sabah as a federal state of the Philippine­s. “Malaysia is aware of remarks made by Mr Aquilino Pimentel Jr, a member of the Philippine­s’ Consultati­ve Committee, which appeared in the media on the claim on Sabah recently,” it said, citing Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman as saying in a press statement.

“The Government of Malaysia reiterates its position that Malaysia does not recognise and will not entertain any claims by any party on Sabah. Sabah is recognised by the United Nations and the internatio­nal community as part of Malaysia since the formation of the Federation on 16 September 1963,” Anifah said. “Therefore, statements such as these will only expose the ignorance of history and internatio­nal law of those who make them, as well as potentiall­y harming the excellent bilateral relations which Malaysia and the Philippine­s currently enjoy.”

Death Sentence

Just last month, Malaysia’s Supreme Court upheld the death sentence for 9 Filipinos who were charged with waging war against the Malaysian King during the 2013 assault on Lahad Datu in Sabah. The Filipinos have been identified as Julham Rashid, 70; Virgilio Nemar Patulada, 53; Salib Akhmad Emali, 65; Tani Lahad Dahi, 64; Basad Manuel, 42; Datu Amirbahar Hushin Kiram, 54; Atik Hussin Abu Bakar, 46; Al Wazir Osman, 62; and Ismail Yasin, 77.

Chief Justice Md Raus Sharif said the January 15 decision of the five-man panel of the Federal Court was unanimous, according to reports by The Star and Asia News Network, adding, the panel agreed with the Court of Appeal that the death sentence was the most appropriat­e based on the findings of the facts of the case.

The other judges were Chief Judge of Malaya Ahmad Maarop, Chief Judge of Sabah and Sarawak Richard Malanjun, and Justices Ramly Ali and Azahar Mohamed.

Basad Manuel is the son of the Jamalul Kiram III, the self-proclaimed Sultan of Sulu, who died from multiple organ failure in Manila in 2013. The bloody incursion by some 200 followers of Kiram from the southern Philippine­s in February 2013 was inspired by the supposed sultan's claims of historical dominion over Sabah.

The two-month siege was the most serious security crisis faced by Malaysia in years, involving armed conflict between the Sultan’s loyal followers and the Malaysian armed forces sent to root them out.

The panel also dismissed the prosecutio­n's appeal against the acquittal of 14 men on the charge of waging war against the King and terrorist-related offences linked to the intrusion from Feb 12 to April 10, 2013, the reports further said.

Chief Justice Md Raus said the panel has no reason to decide otherwise and affirmed the decision by the Court of Appeal delivered last June.

At the height of fighting between Kiram’s followers and security forces, Malaysia deployed armoured vehicles and combat helicopter­s, including naval boats in an effort to flush out the Filipinos on the oil-rich island being claimed by both sides.

About a dozen armoured personnel vehicles arrived in the town of Lahad Datu to support ground troops hunting down at least 50 members of the Sultanate of Sulu headed by Raja Muda Agbimuddin, the sultan’s younger brother.

The group intruded Sabah in February 2013 to exert claim over Sabah, citing historical and legal claims, but Malaysia rejected this and launched a massive assault on about 200 of the sultan’s men following a deadline for them to surrender peacefully. The assault by Malaysian jets and ground artillerie­s left at least 62 intruders dead, but the fighting between the two groups also killed and wounded 18 Malaysian policemen and soldiers.

Malaysia arrested more than 300 Filipinos who are suspected of supporting or aiding Raja Muda Agbimuddin’s group under a strict anti-terrorism law. More than 2,000 Filipino Muslims have returned to Sulu and Tawi-tawi provinces after fleeing Sabah in 2013 for fear they would be arrested in a massive crackdown launched by Malaysian on illegal immigrants and Filipino communitie­s on the island.

Sabah, just several nautical miles off Tawi-tawi, is home to about 2.3 million Malaysians and 889,000 nonmalaysi­ans, based on its 2010 population survey. Malaysia is still paying cession money to the Sultanate of Sulu although it lays claim on the Sabah, a gift given by Brunei to the Sultan of Sulu for helping quell a rebellion in 1658.

 ?? (library photo - Mark Navales) ?? Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III reading the Mindanao Examiner regional newspaper in his home in Manila when he was still alive.
(library photo - Mark Navales) Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III reading the Mindanao Examiner regional newspaper in his home in Manila when he was still alive.

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