From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Mar 30): Less than 10 Sulu gunmen left in Sabah, says police chief
DIGOS CITY, Philippines—The Malaysian government’s Operasi Daulat (operation
sovereignty) is coming to a close after a few more days as the object of the
operations have now been nearly wiped, a top police officer in Sabah said
Saturday.
Speaking over a Sabah-based radio, whose broadcast was monitored here, Sabah
Police Commissioner Hamza Taib said as Ops Daulat entered its 25th day on
Saturday, the number of “Sulu terrorists” had significantly dropped to less than
10 from over 200 prior to March 5.
“They were either killed or captured,” Hamza said.
The latest to be killed, Hamza said, was a “60-year-old terrorist” who tried
to hack a member of the Malaysian police during a search in Simunul in the
Semporna district on Thursday.
On the same day, a brief clash also took place in Lahad Datu, he said.
Hamza told the Sabah radio station that the man’s identity had not been fully
established but initial investigation showed he was “the bodyguard and an aide
to [another] Sulu terrorist, known as ‘Imam Tua’.”
‘Imam Tua’ was among those killed in a clash that followed an alleged attack
by followers of Sultan Jamalul Kiram’s so-called ‘royal army” in Semporna in
which six Malaysian policemen were killed.
The Malaysian government said since the launching of Ops Daulat on March 5,
an operation that involved Malaysian Air Force jets dropping bombs on an area
in Felda Sahabat 17 while 5,000 ground troops backed by armored personnel
carriers combed nearby areas, 68 “Sulu terrorists” had been killed and 121
people detained under the Security Offenses Act and Special Measures or Sosma.
“I can’t say that there are no more terrorists. I believe they still exist
but their number is small, probably less than 10,” the state-run Berita Nasional
Malaysia or Bernama quoted Hamza as telling journalists during an earlier press
conference in Lahad Datu.
Hamza said the sweep has also succeeded in freeing three villages—Tanduo,
Tanjung Batu and Tanjung Labian— of “terrorists.”
He said the remaining Sulu gunmen had broken into smaller groups of “probably
two persons” and were possibly hiding in the areas of Tanjung Bilis and Lok
Buani.
Hamza, still speaking over the Sabah radio station, said as Ops Daulat was
coming to an end, residents of Tanjung Labian “would be allowed to return.”
But Tungku district Assemblyman Mohamad Suhaili Said revealed that the
Malaysian government has decided to permanently shut down Tanduo, a seaside
village of 15 houses, and that residents would be resettled on a 121-hectare
area in the adjacent village of Sungai Merah.
Tanduo was the site of the bloodiest battles between Malaysian security
forces and the Sulu gunmen, led by Kiram’s younger brother Agbimuddin Kiram, who
landed in a village in Lahad Datu on Februay 19 to assert the Sulu sultanate’s
claim to Sabah.
“Tanduo is now part of the Eastern Sabah Safety Zone,” Mohamad Suhaili,
speaking in a news conference, said in explaining the decision.
The New Straits Times, quoting another official, said Tanduo will be turned
into a “tourism” area.
“The beach is beautiful,” the newspaper’s website quoted Lahad Datu district
officer Zulkifli Nasir as saying.
Zulkifli, NST said, even added that “if everything goes well, tenders will be
issued out soon to invite potential investors to develop the area.”
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/70679/less-than-10-sulu-gunmen-left-in-sabah-says-police-chief
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