From the Philippine Daily Inquirer (Mar 25): Sabah under control, claims Malaysia
After more than a month of military operations against forces of the sultan
of Sulu, Malaysian authorities have declared the crisis in eastern Sabah “under
control,” Malacañang reported on Sunday.
National Security Adviser Cesar Garcia, quoting Malaysian authorities, said
police operatives were now conducting a “small unit” operation against the
remnants of Agbimuddin Kiram’s group, who were believed to have broken up into
small groups in Lahad Datu town.
“It’s a small unit operation. That’s how it is right now. They think the
group has broken into small groups and scattered to different villages,” Garcia
said in an interview by phone.
Malaysian security forces and the Sulu royal army clashed anew in Tanjung
Batu in Lahad Datu on Sunday, during which four people, including two children,
were killed and two others, a soldier and another boy, were wounded.
Malaysian Armed Forces Chief Gen. Zulkifeli Zin said in a news conference
that the boy was airlifted to a hospital and the bodies of the four people with
Filipino ancestry were taken to a morgue.
He said Malaysian security forces entered a house in Tanjung Batu around 9:15
a.m. as they tailed “two terrorists” but they were fired upon instead, prompting
them to retaliate.
On March 19, the Malaysian authorities downgraded the alert level from red to
amber in Lahad Datu, more than a month after Agbimuddin and members of the Sulu
royal army launched an offensive to press their claim on Sabah, according to
Garcia.
The alert downgrade would indicate that “they’ve got the situation under
control,” he said.
The downgrade came after the arrest of an alleged top commander of the Sulu
sultan’s forces and his wife. Malaysia identified the new captives as Amirbahar
Hushin Kiram, 50, and his wife, Gina Teves, 47. They were reported arrested in a
marshy area in Kampung Sri Melor Bugaya, Semporna, last Saturday.
So far, Garcia said, he had no direct information if Amirbahar and his wife
were part of Agbimuddin Kiram’s group.
But for more than a week now, the Sulu royal army has not launched any attack
against Malaysian security forces.
Malaysian police deputy chief Khalid Abu Bakas told a Sabah-based radio
station that the “Sulu terrorists” had become leaderless with the arrest of
Amirbahar and the death of one Commander Musa more than two weeks ago.
Still missing
Malaysia also announced it had filed terrorism and rebellion charges against
eight persons arrested in Lahad Datu and investigations were ongoing into the
possible participation of over 100 more detainees.
The fate of the alleged leader, Agbimuddin Kiram, a brother of Sultan Jamalul
Kiram III, remained unknown.
Garcia said the government had received conflicting reports—either he was
still in Lahad Datu or he had slipped back into the Philippines. “The Malaysians
are convinced that he’s still there,” Garcia said, quoting news reports from
Malaysia.
The reported defeat of the sultan’s offensive to reclaim Sabah, however, was
denied by Agbimuddin’s son-in-law, Danilo Datu Abdullah Virtudazo.
Virtudazo told the INQUIRER in Cagayan de Oro City that the Sulu royal army
was “merely in a defensive stance in deference to a ceasefire declared by Sultan
Jamalul Kiram III based on a recent letter of appeal from United Nations
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.”
“The sultanate respected the call for a ceasefire but Malaysia did not,” said
Virtudazo, who is married to Agbimuddin’s fourth daughter, Dayang Mura Napsa.
Statements as psy-war
Another spokesperson of the sultan, Abraham Idjirani, the sultanate’s
secretary general, also cast doubt on the official statements of Malaysian
authorities, branding them as propaganda “psy-war.”
Two of the eight alleged supporters of the sultan who were charged by
Malaysian authorities with terrorism and rebellion (one Kalbi and Madzalie) were
earlier reported killed during the March 1 clashes in Lahad Datu, Idjirani said.
“This is an integral part of the psy-war tactics of the Malaysians. Because
they don’t want to bare the truth, they are using the names of dead people to
support their lies,” Idjirani said over the phone.
Idjirani said they had also received information that the Malaysian
government had sent additional troops, military tanks and helicopters to Lahad
Datu to search for Agbimuddin and the remaining Sulu fighters.
As the Sabah crisis lingers, a descendant of the Sulu royal house, Rita Tuban
of the state-run University of Southeastern Philippines in Davao City, urged the
Sulu royals to retry the diplomatic way of settling the Sabah claim.
Tuban, who is known among Tausugs as Princess Jamala-Rah II, urged the
government to facilitate a meeting of all Sulu royals so peaceful solutions
could be agreed upon.
At a forum organized by Universiti Malaya on Friday, Julkipli Wadi of the
University of the Philippines was reported to have urged Malaysia and the
Philippines to find ways to immediately resolve the Sabah issue as it could
create a larger problem, especially if a third party steps in.
http://globalnation.inquirer.net/70143/sabah-under-control-claims-malaysia
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