Search This Blog

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Sulu sultan won’t budge ... Says followers in Sabah to claim ‘what is ours’

MANILA - Undaunted amidst mounting pressure from both the Philippine and Malaysian governments, Sultan Jamalul Kiram III, the acknowledged leader of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo insisted that his royal decree that authorized the presence of  his younger brother, crown prince Rajah Mudah Agbimuddin Kiram and the combined civilian and armed followers in Lahad Datu, Sabah, Malaysia, stays.

“My decree is not about war. We are not waging war. I sent my brother in Sabah in the name of peace and in exercise of our historic, ancestral and sovereign right over Sabah,” Jamalul told the INQUIRER in a phone interview facilitated through members of his family who were beside him as he was resting after undergoing his regular dialysis treatment.

Jamalul is in Metro Manila and is guarded by family and close relatives.

Asked as to until when his decree stays? Jamalul said, “For as long as necessary. Sabah is our homeland and the international community acknowledges this. If we have to go to the United Nations we will do so. It is upon us, the leaders of Sulu to claim back what is ours,” the sultan added.

Does he have any message for the Philippine government?

“Everything I want to tell the President, I already told him in a letter sent to him, shortly after he assumed the presidency in 2010. I told him in that letter that it is the noble dream of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo to achieve unity, peaceful survival and economic prosperity and to be able to achieve that, the Sabah issue cannot be ignored,” Jamalul said.

Jamalul is 74 years old, the eldest among the Kiram brothers who are direct descendants of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo. He ran and lost for senator in the 2007 National Elections under the Team Unity of former President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo.

Abraham Julpa Idjirani, secretary general and spokesperson for the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo said, Jamalul was supposed to meet on Saturday afternoon with some officials of the Aquino administration but was not able to do so because of the dialysis treatment.

Jamalul’s wife Fatima Celia told the INQUIRER that her husband has been undergoing dialysis treatment for more than a year now.

Open to talks with Palace

Idjirani said, they are open to talks with any official sent by Malacañang as he was already contacted by several officials of the Aquino administration since the standoff in Lahad Datu, Malaysia, was reported in the media. He did not identify the officers who got in touch with him but mentioned the agencies these officials are attached to. “Magpahinga lang si Sultan Jamalul, at pag naka-pahinga na siya, puwede na naming harapin ang sinumang opisyal na gustong makipag-usap sa kanya (After resting, Sultan Jamalul can face any official who wants to talk to him),” Idjirani said.

The INQUIRER also learned from another independent source who wished not to be identified that President Benigno Aquino III was informed of the presence of civilian and armed supporters of the Sultanate of Sulu in Lahad Datu, Malaysia, as early as the morning of Feb. 11 through one of his Cabinet members. “But at that time, the report was still sketchy and we had no idea who the group was. But the President was alerted about this on Day 1 of their landing in Sabah,” the source said.

The Office of the Presidential Adviser in the Peace Process had no comment on Saturday on the Kirams’ claim that they were taking back Sabah.

In Lahad Datu in Sabah, Agbimuddin told the Inquirer that he only follows and receives order from Jamalul and no one else. No one can force us to leave. Even if I, as crown prince of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo is guarded by armed men belonging to our royal security forces, we will never provoke any encounter,” Agbimuddin said.

Assorted arms

Members of the royal security force are armed with assorted long firearms,  Agbimuddin said. “M-14, M-16, M203, Baby Armalite, basta assorted ang dala namin (we have all kinds),” he explained when asked what type of firearms they were carrying.

The active recruitment for members of the royal security force of the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo, according to Agbimuddin, began in 1999 but training only began in 2001 in Simunol, Tawi-Tawi, Isabela, Basilan and even in mainland Zamboanga. “Sa Grand Stand pa nga kami ng Zamboanga nag-physical fitness exercise at alam ng Southcom ’yan (We do our physical fitness exercises at the Zamboanga grand stand, and the Southcom knew it),” Agbimuddin added.

The Southcom he is referring to is the Southern Command of the Armed Forces of the Philippines based in Zamboanga City and the Grand Stand is the one near Cawa-Cawa Boulevard.

Relatives on board

Who takes care of their logistics? Like food and other basic necessities since their landing in Lahad Datu?
Agbimuddin said, most of the residents of Tanduao, Lahad Datu, are Tausugs and relatives of the ones who went with him on board a motorboat from Tawi-Tawi. “Hindi kami magugutom dito at ang mga babae na kasama namin, sila ang nagluluto para sa amin (The women who are with us are doing the cooking).”
Will other groups with the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo follow him in Lahad Datu?

More coming

Agbimuddin answered that was his understanding, but he said he didn’t know when. There might even be more, he said.

Another source from Sulu told the Inquirer that a group identified with a local political clan with a stronghold in one municipality there is reportedly getting ready to follow Agbimuddin in Sabah. The source identified the political leader as a relative of the Kirams and also a former mayor and a former member of the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) known then as the “Tiger of the MNLF.”

“The mayor is getting ready and waiting for the order from Sultan Kiram III to proceed [to Sabah],” the source said in Filipino, adding that the influential leader in Sulu, now in his early 60s, command a force of more than 200 men.

By Arlyn dela Cruz
Philippine Daily Inquirer

16 comments:

  1. PDRM telah selesai berunding dengan ketua kumpulan bersenjata warga Filipina yang telah menceroboh masuk ke kawasan pesisir pantai Lahad Datu Selasa lalu. Sumber polis berkata sekitar jam 5 petang Khamis, satu rundingan telah diadakan diantara Timbalan Ketua Cawangan Khas Sabah, ACP Zulkifli Abd Aziz dengan ketua kumpulan bersenjata itu yang dikenali sebagai Datu Agbimudin Datu Kiram yang didakwa sebagai Raja Muda Sultan Sulu.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Dalam pertemuan itu, Agbimudim bersetuju untuk berundur dari Lahad Datu sekiranya mendapat persetujuan dari Sultan Sulu, Datu Esmail Datu Kiram yang dikhabarkan akan ke Sandakan pada Jumaat (Hari ini). Esmail juga akan dibawa ke Lahad Datu untuk bertemu dengan kumpulan tersebut.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Dianggarkan seramai 200 orang termasuk lima wanita dalam kumpulan penceroboh itu. Anggota kumpulan tersebut dipercayai terdiri dari suku kaum Sibutu, Simunul, Suluk dan Ayakan yang berasal dari Kepulauan Sibutu, Simunul, Pahlawan, Jolo dan Sulu.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Penceroboh-penceroboh itu telah menyusup berlindung di Kampung Tanduo, Lahad Datu dan kedatangan mereka dikatakan menyebabkan ramai penduduk kampung itu keluar melarikan diri menuju ke Tanjung Labian di Lahad Datu untuk berlindung.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Kesemua penceroboh lengkap berpakaian seragam tentera dan bersenjatakan senjata api seperti M14, M16 dan .45mm dan juga beberapa senjata tajam.

    ReplyDelete
  6. TIDAK siapa tahu kenapa 'Sultan' ini mahukan North Borneo (Sabah) untuk dimasukkan ke wilayah Filipina? Satu kenyataan yang generasi muda dan nenek moyang Tausug kutuk sampai kiamat.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Mengapa tidak sahaja keluarkan diri dari kewarganegaraan Filipina menjadi 'Entiti Sendiri' sebagaimana nenek moyangnya? Jadilah Kesultanan SULU yang MERDEKA bukan di bawah ketiak Filipina!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Kerajaan Malaysia akan melakukan yang terbaik, termasuk melalui perundingan, bagi menangani isu pencerobohan sekumpulan warga Filipina di perairan negara di Lahad Datu, Sabah.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Kerajaan melalui pasukan keselamatan akan membuat rundingan dengan sekumpulan lelaki warga asing berpakaian ala tentera yang cuba menceroboh masuk perairan Lahad Datu bagi mengelakkan berlakunya pertumpahan darah.

    ReplyDelete
  10. PDRM kini sedang dalam proses mengusir pulang ke negara asal kumpulan penceroboh dari selatan Filipina yang dikepung di Kampung Tanduo.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Pesuruhjaya Polis Sabah mengesahkan PDRM sudah menamatkan rundingan dengan kumpulan itu dan kini memberi tumpuan untuk mengusir mereka pulang ke negara asal mereka.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Pihak keselamatan akan cuba sebaik mungkin menyelesaikan masalah itu melalui perundingan tanpa bukan pertumpahan darah.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Kerajaan tidak akan melayan apa-apa tuntutan mereka kerana ini bukan platform yang betul untuk menyuarakan apa-apa yang mereka mahu.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Justeru kumpulan ini akan dihantar balik secepat mungkin supaya mereka boleh mencari saluran yang sesuai untuk menyuarakan tuntutan mereka.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Sumber risikan menunjukkan kumpulan itu bukan kumpulan militan atau pengganas tetapi penyokong Kesultanan Sulu.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Usaha memujuk kumpulan bersenjata tersebut supaya meninggalkan kawasan itu sedang giat dijalankan oleh pasukan keselamatan. Sepanjang operasi tersebut, pihak ATM membantu dari segi operasi pemantauan ke atas kumpulan tersebut disamping bersedia menghadapi segala kemungkinan yang bakal berlaku.

    ReplyDelete