From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Mar 3): 5 Malaysian cops, 2 Sulu gunmen killed in fresh clash in Sabah
Seven people – five Malaysian policemen and two Sulu gunmen – were killed in a
fresh clash in Semporna in Tawau district in Sabah, the Malaysian media quoted
Malaysian police as saying on Sunday.
Ismail Omar, Malaysian police inspector general, was quoted by Bernama news
agency as saying that the new fatalities brought to 21 the total number of
combatants killed since Putrajaya decided to take on forces of the so-called
Sulu “royal army,” following three weeks of stand-off in Lahad Datu.
On Friday, 14 people, including two members of the Malaysian police’s elite
VAT69 (commando unit), were also killed when Malaysian security forces stormed
the encampment of the “Sulu intruders” on Felda Sahabat 17 in Tanduo town.
Ismail later told reporters during a noontime news conference aired by a
shortwave station based in Tawau, whose broadcast was monitored here, that when
reports came in that remnants or supporters of Agbimuddin Kiram had been sighted
in Semporna, some 150 kilometers from Lahad Datu, Malaysian security forces were
immediately deployed there on Saturday afternoon.
Bernama quoted Ismail as saying the 8 p.m. incident in Siminul village took
place as Malaysian security forces were also verifying reports that some people
in the village, where many Filipinos live, possessed firearms.
“The five ill-fated personnel were tasked to conduct ground assessment when
fired upon as they approached a house in Kampung Simunul,” he said, adding that
the policemen managed to fire back and had killed two of the gunmen.
“Two of the intruders were also killed and we are still after their
companions,” Omar said.
Hamza Taib, Sabah police commissioner, said during an earlier news conference
also broadcast by a Sabah shortwave station that some 40 policemen were sent to
Semporna following reports that some armed men had been sighted there on
Saturday.
He said the Semporna operation began around 4 p.m. and while police were
heading for Siminul, a group of men numbering not more 10 fired on them.
Hamza said members of the Malaysian police were approaching a house in
Siminul when they were fired upon by the unidentified men, using automatic
rifles.
Ismail said some areas in Lahad Datu, Semporna and Kunal, were now being
closely watched because armed men had been monitored there in the aftermath of
the Lahad Datu clashes on Friday.
Ismail said in fact, armed men had already been sighted in two villages of
Kunak as Agbimuddin’s forces tried to evade the manhunt staged by Malaysian
security forces.
“Ten foreigners with three in camouflage uniforms and arms are currently
hiding in one of the houses in Kunak,” he said.
As this developed, Ismail said three more “intruders” were arrested as they
were sneaking out of Tanduo in Lahad Datu.
Hamza said the situation in Semporna remains under control despite the
incident and that no further incidents had taken place after the ambush.
Earlier, reports had it that an explosion also rocked the Pulau Bum Bum
police station in the town but Hamza said these were without basis.
“The police had encircled the village in hunt of the attackers,” the
newspaper Borneo Insider quoted Hamza in a separate report.
Ismail said the Malaysian authorities had not restricted movements of people
within Sabah despite the series of violence.
He said Sabahans had been advised to remain calm and refrain from believing
unverified stories.
“Only statements from me should be taken as fact,” Ismail said.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/66447/5-malaysian-cops-2-sulu-gunmen-killed-in-fresh-clash-in-sabah
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.